This Is the Closest You Will Come to the Lunar Landscape!
- Allplastics News
- Monday, 01 July 2019 11:01
- Allplastics News Team
Bring the lunar surface home!
Only 12 humans have walked on the moon. When Neil Armstrong walked on the Sea of Tranquillity on July 20, 1969 followed by Buzz Aldrin, they were privileged to take one giant leap for mankind.The last person who walked on the moon was Eugene Cernan in 1972, before he stepped back into the Apollo 17 Lunar Module.
Allplastics can bring the Lunar surface into your living room, office, club or school library using TotalDesign lightweight Lunar surface cladding panels in various colours.
Harbouring Views with Safety
- Allplastics News
- Monday, 20 May 2019 11:01
- Allplastics News Team
When it comes to safety the decision is clear!
Abrasion Resistant Polycarbonate Safety Panels.
Sydney Harbour - the most stunning harbour city in the world. Delighting both residents and visitors with amazing views of our harbour and landmarks such as the Sydney Harbour Bridge and Opera House. Safety panels and barriers are required to minimize the risks of accidents and deter “climbers” from going over a dangerous edge. Abrasion resistant polycarbonate panels from Allplastics Engineering is 250 times stronger than normal glass! It is virtually unbreakable.
No need to travel 54 million light years to see a Black Hole
- Allplastics News
- Friday, 17 May 2019 11:01
- Allplastics News Team
In April 2019, Scientists revealed, with the use of the Event Horizon Telescope, they were able to capture the first photographs of a black hole. The black hole is at the centre of M87 - a galaxy 54 million light years away!
We at Allplastics Engineering Architectural Division, believe there is a simpler and more beautiful way of observing black holes……AIR-Board Black!
New design panel for interior and acoustic applications
With the new "black AIR-board®" product series, Design Composite not only follows the ongoing trend towards clear shapes and colours
Potential realized at Sculpture by The Sea
- Allplastics News
- Wednesday, 15 May 2019 11:01
- Allplastics News Team
Layered Potential by artist Elyssa Sykes-Smith is a site-specific installation that explores the psychological state of the layering of ideas to arrive at new and unexpected conclusions. The artwork includes on figure depicted in a gesture of reaching our and projecting shapes and colours, symbolic of layered ideas, into the space.
Layered Potential was created using a selection of acrylic, sourced and pre-fabricated, at Allplastics Engineering: Perspex and polycarbonate. Sykes-Smith utilised a variety of Perspex elements to create the figure including translucent, opaque, frosted, mirrored and fluorescent elements.