ADL Mies Glass Wall
MIES GLASS WALL
MIES GLASS WALL
Mies is a minimal element that divides volumes into different spaces that are interconnected at the same time.
The transparency of the continuous glass wall gives life to environments where visibility and the path of light are never blocked.
Thanks to the wide range of finishes with aluminium and glass elements, Mies customises any environment by optimally integrating with any style and with all ADL doors.
Thanks to the innovative patented section, it guarantees a wide range of alignments and is easy to install.
TECHNICAL DATA
DESIGNER
MASSIMO LUCA
In 2004, Designer Massimo Luca Gives Birth To The Visionary Project Adl, Born With The Aim Of Designing And Producing Fully-functional, Aluminium-made Interior Doors With An Excellent Aesthetic And A Particular Attention And Care Towards Sustainability During The Choice Of Materials.
Being able to merge technical-aesthetic quality and high technology is the result of Massimo Luca's intelligent sensibility which, together with his own professional experience in the world of interior design, soon enabled him to cross the national borders, making ADL one of the most important players in the international market.
After his studies in Urban Planning at the IUAV, Venice's technical university, Massimo embarked on a twenty-year-long career in avant-garde design studies, where he got in touch with many important designers.
He subsequently cooperated with relevant companies in the world of interior design, ranging from kitchen planning to furniture and hi-tech aluminium products. His cultural exchanges with designers such as Karim Rashid, Carlo Colombo and Ross Lovegrove also proved really important for Massimo. His many successful projects are now hosted in buildings made by the likes of Armani Casa, Matteo Thun and Renzo Piano.
The stylistic exercise made during those years, coupled with a meticolous study of the materials -specifically the match between aluminium and glass- brought Massimo Luca to develop an eclectic way of thinking which goes beyond the mere aesthetic vistuosity, leading his design objects into the land of hi-tech functional innovations.
Therefore, his doors become not just interiors' objects, but also crossings into the future in today's living spaces, openings which do not divide areas, but instead create a synergy between them, thus creating what Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe called "fluent spaces".