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#Industry News

Steel Choices for SM02 Evolution with Angle Screws

Different Types of Steel

There are different types of steel that Planium makes available and each has its own well-defined chromatic character that gives a particular vision to the whole. We are obviously talking about the choice of textures for floors and walls: a metal, Steel, which certainly needs no introduction due to its connotation of hardness and durability.

Furnishing an interior space, be it public or private, with a Calamine Steel will give a completely different effect than using a classic Stainless Steel. This is because the treatment that a Steel can receive determines not only some of its material or chemical peculiarities, but also aesthetic ones.

In its best known and "canonical" form, Stainless Steel has the elegance of "coldness", detachment; with its shiny mantle it is perfectly inserted in both internal and urban contexts, reflecting what is around it. When it is oxidized, Steel is very unique because it assumes an apparently warm color, close to brown, which however has streaks of gray in filigree. Then there is the Stainless Concrete which from a chromatic point of view echoes Concrete and for this reason, despite being a Steel, it has taken on this name ... The setting that this Steel offers is essentially devoted to an Industrial style, almost like a workshop.

Superlative colors cover it: Ash Gray, Khaki, Shell, Platinum. What prevails is an effect of abstraction, almost a mystery with clear characters. This is a trait that, like Calamine - a special finish proposed by Planium, a very strong steel oxide on the market - makes it particularly attractive for architects and more ...

SM02 Evolution

SM02 Evolution is a technical floor with a dry laying system. This takes place by means of support and mechanical coupling between the tile and the tile.

Without a doubt, SM02 Evolution, with its visible angle screws that distinguish it from all the others, can be applied to any type of finish that Planium proposes to cover floors, therefore also Copper and Brass, one of its historical alloys. In any case, its combination with steels, that is, with light metals, is truly extraordinary: the detail of the screw gives the steel a very vintage industrial and high-tech appearance.

Details

  • Via L. Tolstoi, 27, 20098 San Giuliano Milanese MI, Italy
  • Luigi Luca Borrelli