Retail complexes adopt glass cladding to achieve sleek, unified exteriors with brand consistency, solar control, and durability for Gulf and Central Asian markets.
Research facilities use glass walls to enable controlled observation, visual collaboration, and secure separation—suitable for Middle East and Central Asia labs.
Entertainment complexes use illuminated glass curtain walls and backlit façades to create nighttime landmarks in Dubai, Riyadh, and Central Asian cities.
Universities adopt glass facades to express transparency, support collaborative learning spaces, and modernize campus identity across the Middle East and Central Asia.
Glass curtain walls in airport terminals boost daylight, reduce energy use, and create calming passenger environments across Middle East and Central Asia hubs.
Atriums, central circulation corridors, food courts, and vertical galleries often use curtain wall glazing to increase daylight and shopper engagement.
Glass walls in emergency departments enable line-of-sight monitoring, rapid triage, and efficient workflows while supporting infection control in Middle East hospitals.
Frameless glass entrances—full-height glazing and pivot doors—create premium arrivals at malls in Dubai, Riyadh, and regional Central Asian shopping centers.
Glass partitions in hospitals are ideal for nurse stations, observation bays, outpatient clinics, and rehab areas—balancing visibility and privacy in GCC and Central Asian facilities.