Surface finishes
- raw-cypress closed panels
- charred reveal lines
- washi rice-paper insets
- soft backlit niche
- brushed travertine ledge
Terrazzo
A Terrazzo wall-panel SKU with a softly lit sculptural niche, raw-cypress rhythm, and closed architectural faces for a refined gallery corridor.
Published Reviewed

Overview
The full design intent, materials, and how this system is built — in detail.
Backlit Sculptural Niche is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time for homes that need a closed wall-panel composition and one controlled illuminated art moment. The Terrazzo series binding comes from the live catalog, while the new differentiator focuses on a quiet gallery wall panel with backlit sculptural niche rather than another rail, frieze, grid, portal, wainscot, or acoustic cove. That makes the page useful for buyers who want a named product decision, not a generic wall treatment.
The module is planned as raw-cypress wall panels with charred reveal lines and washi rice-paper insets, supported by a compact niche for one sculptural object. Its purpose is not open display shelving. It is a disciplined wall plane that gives a corridor, dining edge, stair landing, or sitting-room threshold a curated focal point while keeping the storage face closed and visually calm. The niche can hold a small object, floral vessel, or rotating art piece without making the surrounding wall feel busy.
For designers, this SKU turns a broad request for decorative wall panels into a reviewable scope: Terrazzo, Wall_Panel, Backlit Sculptural Niche, 1.2 meters of base planning, 3.4 meters of wall planning, no tall cabinet planning, and 0.8 meters of countertop or ledge planning. The publisher computes the USD price from those meter values, so the copy does not invent a price, discount, package total, or promotion. Those inputs also help procurement teams compare quotations without losing the design intent.
The design-led homeowner using a calm corridor wall as a curated art moment should review both daily use and evening atmosphere. The backlight must flatter the niche without creating glare, the panel rhythm should hide service access, and the surrounding wall must still feel composed when the object is changed, removed, or viewed from an adjacent room. A good wall-panel module should support repeated use: walking past it, cleaning it, dimming it, and living with it every evening.
Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, cabinet rhythm, niche proportion, and spatial intent; final manufactured product may vary in lighting, site proportions, surface texture, color calibration, reveal depth, wall alignment, and installation conditions after measurement and sample approval. Buyers should treat the page as a commercial starting point, then lock final details through drawings and finish samples. This disclosure matters because the light temperature, object scale, and wall context can materially change the final impression.
Fadior specifies the cabinet body around 304 stainless steel construction, then resolves exterior finish, lighting route, access panels, wall fixing, delivery segmentation, and site tolerances through project drawings. The visible mood can stay soft, tactile, and contemplative, while the underlying planning remains practical for manufacturing, shipping, and installation. That separation is important for international projects where the buyer wants a quiet residential surface but the contractor needs a clear, durable construction basis.
The finish decision should be tested with real room light. Raw cypress can read warm and quiet in the morning, while charred reveal lines become more graphic at night. Washi rice-paper insets soften the wall, but they must be scaled carefully so they do not look like random patchwork. The brushed travertine ledge should feel secondary to the niche, not like a counter that invites clutter. Samples should be viewed beside the actual floor, wall color, and nearby furniture before production approval.
The lighting plan deserves the same discipline as the panel plan. The backlit niche should create a gentle halo, not a harsh spotlight. Driver access, dimming control, cable routing, maintenance reach, and heat behavior should be confirmed early because they are easier to hide in the wall rhythm before manufacturing. If the owner wants warmer evening light, that preference should be stated in drawings and checked against the selected object, wall tone, and viewing distance.
This SKU is especially useful where a room needs a strong focal point but cannot tolerate loose display furniture. In a narrow corridor, the niche gives depth without reducing passage width. Beside a dining area, it creates a calm art pause without competing with the table. Near a stair landing, it can turn a circulation wall into a composed view. In each case, the closed panel field keeps the home tidy while the niche carries the visual memory.
Compared with Terrazzo products already published in this series, Backlit Sculptural Niche has a narrower job. It is not a picture rail, oven service frieze, matte display grid, mineral portal, linen shadow wainscot, gallery datum wall, reveal panel set, or acoustic cove. The purchase decision is about a single illuminated recess in a closed wall-panel system. That distinction helps buyers, designers, and the factory discuss the same object with less ambiguity.
Before production, Fadior reviews wall flatness, fixing structure, niche depth, object size, backlight access, ledge projection, finish samples, panel breaks, delivery route, elevator clearance, installation sequence, cleaning reach, and how the wall is seen from adjoining spaces. If the module must be split for transport, the visible seams should align with the panel rhythm rather than interrupt the niche. The final drawing set should make those decisions clear before payment and manufacturing.
The result is a shop-ready wall-panel object for buyers who want art, storage discipline, and architectural calm in one named SKU. Terrazzo provides the catalog series, Backlit Sculptural Niche names the distinct design move, and the closed exterior keeps the wall useful after the first impression. The page gives homeowners a clear starting point and gives project teams the language needed to request a measured quotation, sample review, and production-ready package.
A procurement team can also use this page to separate the emotional reason for the product from the practical buying data. The emotional reason is the calm illuminated niche: one controlled place for an object, set inside a quiet wall rather than surrounded by shelves. The practical data is the named series, category, differentiator, dimensions, production posture, and disclosure language. Keeping those two layers together helps a designer preserve the idea while still giving the estimator a clear object to cost.
Installation planning should protect the visual simplicity. The backlight driver should be accessible without adding an obvious door in the middle of the wall, the ledge should be reachable for cleaning, and the niche depth should suit the object the owner actually plans to display. If a wall is uneven, the shop drawings should show how the panel backs, side returns, and reveal lines absorb that tolerance. Those details prevent the final surface from looking improvised on site.
The module can also be adapted to different residential moods without changing its identity. A villa corridor may use a warmer light level and larger sculptural object, while an apartment dining edge may need a smaller niche and tighter ledge projection. A quiet stair landing may favor a vertical composition, while a lounge threshold may use a wider panel rhythm. In each case, the SKU remains Backlit Sculptural Niche because the central decision is still a single illuminated recess inside a closed Terrazzo wall-panel suite.
Maintenance should be discussed before the order is approved. The owner should know how the niche surface is cleaned, how the light is accessed, how the object is removed, and how the surrounding panel finish responds to fingerprints or dust. This is a small part of the design conversation, but it is often what decides whether a feature remains elegant after daily use. Fadior reviews those points before manufacturing so the wall can stay calm, serviceable, and precise.

Visual interpretation
See how the product holds its design language at room scale and in close detail.
The image direction keeps the Terrazzo product closed and architectural, using cypress rhythm, charred reveals, and rice-paper softness to support the illuminated niche.
The Tokyo Wabi Kitchen mood supports the product through diffused lattice light, tactile surfaces, and quiet asymmetry without exposing storage interiors.
Key features
These points explain why this flagship product stands out.
Backlit art moment
A single niche gives the wall a focused sculptural point without turning the product into open shelving.
Closed panel discipline
The surrounding wall remains a calm closed exterior plane for corridors, dining edges, or sitting-room thresholds.
Project-ready dimensions
Meter inputs are present for deterministic pricing while final proportions remain adjustable after site measurement.
Lighting-ready review
The niche gives project teams a defined place to coordinate backlight warmth, driver access, object scale, and evening glare before production.
Materials and finish
Finish, color, and detailing are selected to keep the product convincing in both specification and daily use.
Surface finishes
Color options


Customization
This is where the product moves from inspiration into a live project discussion.
Fadior can adjust niche width, backlight route, panel rhythm, ledge depth, wall fixing, side returns, and delivery splits after measurement and sample approval.
Project teams should confirm wall flatness, socket and driver access, viewing distance, object size, cleaning reach, delivery access, and final finish samples before production.
Specifications
The key data is organized for clear review before planning and quotation.
| Series | Terrazzo |
|---|---|
| Category | Wall_Panel |
| Differentiator | Backlit Sculptural Niche |
| Module dimensions | 1.2 m base, 3.4 m wall, 0.0 m tall, 0.8 m countertop |
| Production posture | Made to order in Foshan, China with approximately 30-day production lead time |
| Imagery posture | Design rendering for material mood and spatial intent |
Quick facts
Material standards, hardware ratings, and construction methods you can cite or verify before you specify.
| Claim | Value | Standard | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Made-to-order production | Manufactured in Foshan, China with approximately 30-day production lead time | Shop SKU disclosure | Placed in first description paragraph and FAQ |
| Design rendering disclosure | Product imagery is a design rendering | Shop SKU disclosure | Placed in customer-facing copy |
| Series binding | Terrazzo | Sanity catalog | Series comes from the live Sanity catalog |
| Category binding | Wall_Panel | Sanity catalog | Category comes from the live Sanity catalog |
| Differentiator | Backlit Sculptural Niche | Slug contract | Title, slug, and copy use the same differentiator |
| Slug | terrazzo-backlit-sculptural-niche-in-terrazzo | Shop SKU naming | Follows series-differentiator-in-series shape |
| Construction basis | 304 stainless steel cabinet body | Fadior product standard | Exterior finish is project-specific |
| Module dimensions | 1.2 m base, 3.4 m wall, 0.0 m tall, 0.8 m countertop | Formula pricing input | Publisher computes price from these inputs |
| Niche scope | One illuminated sculptural niche inside a closed wall-panel composition | Buyer intent | Different from rails, friezes, grids, portals, wainscots, and acoustic coves |
| Visual direction | Tokyo Wabi Kitchen for Wall_Panel | Image style rotation | Compatible style and category overlay for all image briefs |
FAQ
These questions help buyers compare options and reduce friction before inquiry.
It centers the wall on one softly illuminated sculptural niche inside a closed architectural plane. Existing Terrazzo products already cover picture rail, service frieze, surface plane, display grid, portal, gallery datum, wainscot, reveal panels, acoustic cove, and other broad panel treatments. This SKU is different because the purchase decision is about a focused art moment, controlled lighting, and closed wall-panel rhythm rather than another rail, grid, or trim system.
Yes. Backlit Sculptural Niche is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time after measurements, lighting route, wall fixing, finish samples, delivery segmentation, and installation details are approved. The page is a commerce starting point, not an in-stock packaged panel, so final dimensions and niche placement are confirmed through project drawings.
Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, cabinet rhythm, niche proportion, and spatial intent. Final manufactured product may vary in lighting, wall alignment, site proportions, surface texture, color calibration, reveal depth, object styling, and installation conditions after measurement and sample approval, so buyers should use drawings and finish samples to approve the final order. Confirm the final order only after measured drawings, finish samples, and lighting review are approved.
Review the niche as a complete wall-panel decision rather than a loose decorative opening. Confirm viewing distance, object size, light warmth, driver access, service panel location, wall flatness, cleaning reach, delivery segmentation, and how the illuminated area appears from adjacent rooms. Fadior then turns those decisions into measured drawings and finish samples before manufacturing begins. This keeps the niche useful and serviceable after the first visual impression has passed.
Related products
These references help the current product stay connected to the wider collection.