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During a remodel, the owner had seen exactly what he wanted in a magazine and brought it to us. We were able to reproduce the design utilizing foam products instead of wood for the crown molding, archway and column. (The lattice work is wood.)
On the right, the rope design in the middle is tile inset into the foam to match design elements throughout the home.
Niches can be created in any size, shape or style.
The left niche is on display in our showroom. It is the same style as the one on the right but has been installed to match the wall texture and color.
This project called for curved moldings in several areas of the home.
To create these moldings in wood, the cost would have been prohibitive.
WNC was able to design and manufacture these moldings to exact specifications and saved the homeowner a large portion of his budget.
The fireplace on the left is in our showroom. It is coated with a limestone finish and the details are hand carved to meet design specifications.
The mantel on the right is a 'smooth coat' design. It comes paint-ready and can be finished to match any color scheme.
The eight foot rosette is was delivered 'stucco ready' for finish on site. Any of our products can be produced with the final finish or delivered paint/stucco ready.
The condos on the right, Union Square in downtown San Diego, use foam shapes for the roof line molding, accent balconies, and stair-step design at the top of the white accent panels.
The Naval housing on the left employed foam shapes in the column tops, window frames, and entryway surrounds.
On the right, this home in Ramona had steel beams supporting the patio. WNC provide the foam shapes that turned the cold steel into fabulous architectural details.
At this residence in Chula Vista, the owner wanted a cast stone look around their windows. WNC was able to engineer the project to meet the needs of this customer.
On the right, is the same home In Ramona as above. The front entrance was designed using foam for the 16 foot columns and molding connecting those columns. The decor around each window is also WNC foam product.
This foam wall, surrounding a Point Loma residence, was designed for curb appeal, strength, and privacy.
The wall's foundation is concrete block. Steel posts (3" tubing) were imbedded in the concrete blocks to anchor the foam walls and support the unique wall caps, also of foam.
The wall itself is coated with acrylic cement and the caps with our limestone product.
The National City Fire Department Headquarters employed WNC foam to economically mimic concrete products at the eaves (where it would be too heavy to do in concrete).
These doors are completely framed with foam products including the arch, raised frame and circle details.
The home on the right is an example of foam products used in the window and door frames as well as the shutters. This project is military housing in the Sierra Mesa area.
Fairwinds Retirement Center in Oceanside used foam products for all the window frames, the belly band around the building, arches, and pot shelves (window sills).
For the military housing in NTC, Point Loma, WNC fabricated these faux louvered vents to add detail to their roof equipment camouflage.
The columns on the left are samples of different sizes, shapes, & design possibilities. The finishes for these columns can be done by us or through use of commercial finishing kits.
Monolite provided WNC with a computer drawing of their logo. We were able to fabricate this sign to match their detailed design.
The rosette on the left is an example of the many types of design possibilities - oval, circular, square. The size, shape and design is only limited by imagination.
The sign on the right was the result of a customer wanting unique house numbers. A house number can become a feature design element of your home, employing almost any icon, symbol or font.
WNC enhanced the round concrete balcony by creating the foam facade to match the design of other architectural elements in the home.
The sign on the right was constructed for this business to match the logo design on their business card. The customer then painted the sign to match their facility decor.
Various grains can be applied to shutters, corbels, or beams to give it the look and feel of real wood.
The keystone on the right was designed to meet the request of the homeowner. In this example they wanted their initials within the design.