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Acoustic Wood PanelsSlat · Ceiling · Fire-rated

Acoustic ceiling panel

Bring absorption overhead where the walls are glazed or already in use.

Acoustic ceiling panels put absorption on the largest available surface — the ceiling — which is often the most effective place to treat a room, especially where the walls are glazed or already occupied. They suspend on a standard grid or as rafts.

The build-up is the planned specification; absorption is published against a test report per configuration and mounting height.

Specification

FormatSuspended acoustic ceiling panel / raft
MountingGrid or wire-suspended raft
Sound absorption (αw)Test report pendingpending
Reaction to fire (Euroclass)Test report pendingpending

Why some rows say “pending”. We are pre-launch. Absorption (αw / NRC) and reaction-to-fire (Euroclass) figures are published per finish only when a named test report supports them, and FSC when the certificate is held — never before. Geometry shown is the planned standard specification.

How many panels?

10panels at ≈ 1.20 m² each
covers ≈ 12.0 m² — add a margin for cuts and offsets

Finishes

  • Natural oak
  • Walnut
  • Black
  • Grey

Typical applications

  • Open-plan offices with glazed walls
  • Classrooms and lecture spaces
  • Cafés and dining rooms

See and feel it before you specify, or get a project price.

Frequently asked questions

Is a ceiling better than wall panels?

Often, because the ceiling is usually the biggest untreated surface and stays clear of furniture and fittings. The right answer is per-room: model the space, or use the reverberation calculator, to compare adding absorption overhead versus on the walls.