Structural glass facades are used in lobbies, observation decks, waterfront pavilions and panoramic office spaces to deliver unobstructed views—appealing in waterfront developments from Dubai to Aktau.
Full-height glass walls are used in flagship stores, mall storefronts, showrooms and boutique streets to maximize displays, capture passerby attention and connect interior merchandising with street life.
Glass curtain walls are widely used in civic, cultural, transit and commercial public buildings to boost daylight, visibility and a modern presence across GCC and Central Asia.
Glass curtain walls are applied in VIP suites, media boxes, concourses and hospitality zones of stadiums to enable sightlines, crowd separation and premium spectator experiences in modern arenas.
Mixed-use projects use glass wall systems to visually link retail, office and residential zones—creating active street edges, transparent podiums and seamless vertical transitions in urban schemes.
Government complexes, municipal halls, courthouses and civic libraries use curtain wall systems to express modern civic identity, durability and daylighted public spaces across the region.
Transportation terminals use glass walls to improve CCTV sightlines, enable clear passenger routing and facilitate security zones—integrating glazing with screening areas in modern terminals.
High-rise towers use unitized, double-skin and bespoke curtain wall systems with solar control to sculpt iconic silhouettes while meeting wind, thermal and structural demands.