Abet Laminati Recycled Leather Wall System

1 MIN READ
This Recycled Leather Wall System from Abet Laminati is made of recycled post-consumer leather fibers (treated with a vegetable tanning process and mixed with the latex of natural rubber) combined with a polymer and mounted on a high-density core. Seven colors are available, all of which can be cleaned with soap and water. The system can be installed in a vertical or horizontal pattern using extruded aluminum profiles as visible accents or as nonvisible components. The panels and aluminum trim are held together with tongue-and-groove profiles, creating the support structure for the panels to be mounted on a wall. abetlaminati.com

This Recycled Leather Wall System from Abet Laminati is made of recycled post-consumer leather fibers (treated with a vegetable tanning process and mixed with the latex of natural rubber) combined with a polymer and mounted on a high-density core. Seven colors are available, all of which can be cleaned with soap and water. The system can be installed in a vertical or horizontal pattern using extruded aluminum profiles as visible accents or as nonvisible components. The panels and aluminum trim are held together with tongue-and-groove profiles, creating the support structure for the panels to be mounted on a wall. abetlaminati.com

This Recycled Leather Wall System from Abet Laminati is made of recycled post-consumer leather fibers (treated with a vegetable tanning process and mixed with the latex of natural rubber) combined with a polymer and mounted on a high-density core. Seven colors are available, all of which can be cleaned with soap and water. The system can be installed in a vertical or horizontal pattern using extruded aluminum profiles as visible accents or as nonvisible components. The panels and aluminum trim are held together with tongue-and-groove profiles, creating the support structure for the panels to be mounted on a wall. abetlaminati.com

About the Author

Jennifer Brite

Jennifer Brite is a design journalist and public-health scientist who is currently pursuing a doctorate in public health with a concentration in epidemiology and demography at the City University of New York. For ARCHITECT, she writes about new products and sustainable design.

No recommended contents to display.

Upcoming Events

  • Build-to-Rent Conference

    JW Marriott Phoenix Desert Ridge

    Register Now
  • Reimagining Sense of Place: Materiality, Spatial Form, and Connections to Nature

    Webinar

    Register for Free
  • Homes that Last: How Architects Are Designing a Resilient Future

    Webinar

    Register Now
All Events