Plain or dated walls
Interiors that need a stronger focal point or a more intentional finish.
Turn a plain wall into a deliberate design feature. A One connects the selected finish with the condition, dimensions and character of the space.
The correct decorative scope depends on the design direction, substrate, installation method, access and surrounding finishes.
Surface condition, scale, lighting and adjacent details affect the final result.
Interiors that need a stronger focal point or a more intentional finish.
A reception, living room or feature area that lacks a clear design anchor.
Damage, waviness or preparation issues that must be resolved first.
A concept that needs the right panel, wallcovering or finish system.
Decorative work that must align with lighting, flooring, joinery or renovation.
The final scope identifies the material, substrate preparation, layout, transitions and approval method.
Designed focal walls for living areas, receptions, bedrooms, offices, retail and hospitality interiors.
Reference images are useful, but lighting, room proportions, substrate condition and surrounding materials change how a finish appears in the real space.
Where possible, the selected solution should be approved through samples, material boards or a small trial area before full installation.
Provide references, drawings, colours or a description of the intended atmosphere.
Assess dimensions, wall condition, moisture concerns, access and adjacent finishes.
Approve the selected finish through samples or a clear material specification.
Protect surrounding finishes and prepare the wall for the selected system.
Complete the decorative work using the agreed layout, method and sequence.
Review alignment, edges, transitions and agreed completion details.
A strong visual result still depends on scope, substrate condition, access and the sequence of surrounding works.
Coordinate wall decoration with renovation, lighting, flooring, cleaning or maintenance where relevant.
Confirm the wall condition, finish system, layout and approval method before programme or price is finalised.
Requests are accepted across all seven emirates, subject to scope and mobilisation review.
Identify client approvals, material responsibilities and the process for agreed changes.
Real project imagery should replace these temporary visual references before production launch.
Options may include panels, wallpaper, textured finishes, paint effects, murals and wall art. The correct option depends on the design and wall condition.
Yes. A reference helps establish direction, but materials, scale and final appearance must be adapted to the actual space.
Surface preparation can be included where required. The level of repair is confirmed after inspection.
This can be reviewed for commercial sites, subject to building access, noise limits and the approved programme.
Where the material or finish allows it, samples or a small approval area should be used before full application.
Reference images, drawings, dimensions and photographs help A One review the material and preparation requirements.