Article Contents:
- Advantages of polyurethane for facades: when material determines the outcome
- Absolute moisture resistance
- Frost resistance without compromise
- UV stability and color fastness
- Lightness that opens up possibilities
- Strength and repairability
- Economic efficiency
- Facade decor elements: architectural vocabulary in polyurethane
- Cornices: horizontal lines structuring the facade
- Rustication: Imitation of Stone Masonry
- Keystones: accents above windows and doors
- Pilasters and half-columns: vertical divisions
- Moldings and friezes: linear decor
- Brackets, corbels, and balusters
- Resistance to temperature and moisture: tested by the elements
- Operating temperature range
- Behavior during temperature fluctuations
- Moisture resistance in detail
- Biostability
- Installation on various types of facades: versatility of application
- Brick and block walls
- Plastered facades
- Wooden facades
- Insulated facades (wet facade, ventilated facade)
- Siding facades
- Painting facade molding: protection and aesthetics
- Choosing paint
- Painting technology
- Color solutions
- Service life and warranties: an investment in durability
- Estimated service life
- Factors affecting durability
- Manufacturer warranties
- Frequently Asked Questions About Polyurethane Facade Molding
- How does facade polyurethane differ from interior polyurethane?
- Can polyurethane be painted in dark colors?
- Is it necessary to remove old decor before installing polyurethane decor?
- Is polyurethane flammable?
- Can polyurethane decor be installed in winter?
- How much does polyurethane facade decoration cost?
- Does polyurethane decor require special care?
- Does polyurethane decor look different from plaster or stone?
- Conclusion: a facade that speaks of taste
A building's facade is its business card, first impression, architectural manifesto. It's by the facade that we judge a house: whether it's noble or ordinary, has character or is faceless, built with soul or stamped out on an assembly line. And if you want your building to stand out among typical boxes, to gain individuality without astronomical costs for stone carving or plaster molding,Facade decoration made of polyurethane— this is a solution that combines the beauty of classical architecture with the practicality of modern technologies.
Polyurethane molding weighs dozens of times less than stone or plaster, is installed in days, not weeks, lasts for decades without cracks or crumbling, and costs many times less than traditional materials. At the same time, it reproduces any complexity of ornament—from strict classical profiles to ornate Baroque curls. Rain, frost, sun, wind—polyurethane withstands all of this steadfastly, preserving its original shape and color for years. Decoration and protection in one material—that's what polyurethane facade molding is.
Advantages of polyurethane for facades: when the material determines the result
Why has polyurethane become the material of choice for modern facade decor? Because it possesses a unique set of properties not found together in any other material.
Absolute water resistance
Water is the main enemy of facades. Rain, snow, fog, condensation—all of this constantly attacks external walls. Traditional materials behave differently. Plaster absorbs moisture, swells, and when water inside freezes, it cracks and crumbles within 2-3 winters. Wood rots, blackens, deforms, and requires constant maintenance. Concrete and artificial stone are relatively durable but heavy and expensive.
Polyurethane does not absorb water. At all. Its closed-cell structure makes the material completely waterproof. Rain, snow, fog—all of this runs off the surface without causing harm. Even in direct contact with water, polyurethane remains stable. This is critical forfacade moldingthat is exposed to the open air for decades.
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Frost resistance without compromise
The Russian climate is harsh. In winter, temperatures drop to -30°C and below. In spring and autumn, freeze-thaw cycles occur, which destroy materials faster than constant frost. The material absorbed moisture, the water froze, expanded, and tore the structure—the classic mechanism of destruction.
Polyurethane withstands hundreds of freeze-thaw cycles without losing its properties. Laboratory tests show preservation of strength and shape after 300+ cycles (from +20°C to -40°C). This means that in real operating conditions, polyurethane decor will last 30-50 years without destruction. For comparison: plaster molding on a facade deteriorates in 3-5 winters, wooden decor requires maintenance every 2-3 years.
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UV stability and colorfastness
Solar ultraviolet destroys many polymers. Plastic yellows, becomes brittle, cracks. Paints fade, lose saturation. But high-quality facade polyurethane contains UV stabilizers—special additives that absorb ultraviolet light, protecting the main structure of the material.
Thanks to this,polyurethane facade decorretains its shape and color for decades even on the southern, sunniest side of the building. White remains white, painted elements preserve the saturation of their hue. There's no need to repaint every 3-5 years, as with wooden decor.
Lightness, opening up possibilities
Weight is a critical parameter for facade decor. Stone molding weighs tons, requires wall reinforcement, complex fastenings, lifting equipment. Plaster is lighter but still creates significant load—a square meter of plaster decor weighs 40-60 kg.
Polyurethane radically changes the situation. A linear meter of a cornice 150 mm wide weighs only 800-1200 grams. A square meter of decorative elements—3-5 kg. This is 10-15 times lighter than plaster and 50-100 times lighter than stone. Such decor can be mounted on any walls: brick, block, wooden, even on insulated facades with a thin plaster layer.
Lightness simplifies transportation, installation, and reduces risks when working at height. Two people can install in a day the decor that would take a team of masons a week.
Strength and repairability
Despite its lightness, polyurethane is strong. The density of high-quality facade polyurethane is 350-450 kg/m³. This provides resistance to mechanical impacts: accidental blows, wind loads, snow pressure.
Polyurethane does not crumble or flake like plaster. It is elastic, capable of absorbing minor deformations without forming cracks. If damage does occur (strong impact, falling branch), it is easily repaired. The damaged section is cut out, a new fragment is glued in its place, the joint is filled, sanded, and painted. After repair, the mark is unnoticeable.
Economic Efficiency
Cost—a weighty argument. A linear meter of polyurethane cornice costs 400-1200 rubles depending on the complexity of the profile. A similar plaster cornice—1500-3000 rubles. Stone—5000-15000 rubles. Carved wood—3000-8000 rubles.
At the same time, it's necessary to consider not only the cost of the material but also installation. Polyurethane is installed quickly, with simple tools, by two or three workers. Stone requires a team of masons, lifting equipment, complex fastenings. The final savings when using polyurethane reach 60-70% compared to stone and 30-40% compared to plaster.
Elements of Facade Decor: Architectural Dictionary in Polyurethane
Polyurethane molding allows creating a stylish and presentable exterior of a house, while the material retains its qualities in any weather conditions.includes dozens of types of elements. Each has its own purpose, place in the architectural composition, and function.
Cornices: horizontal lines that structure the facade
A cornice is a projecting horizontal element that divides the facade by height, diverts rainwater from the wall, and creates a play of light and shadow on the plane.
The crowning cornice is located under the roof, finishes the wall, and visually separates the walls from the roof. This is the largest and most expressive cornice on the facade. The projection width (overhang) of the crowning cornice is 200-500 mm depending on the scale of the building. The profile is complex, multi-stepped: beads, scotias, shelves, drip edges. Such a cornice not only decorates but also protects the upper part of the wall from water running off the roof.
The interfloor cornice divides the facade horizontally at the level of the floor slabs between stories. It visually structures a high wall, creates rhythm and proportions. The projection of the interfloor cornice is smaller than that of the crowning one—usually 100-200 mm. The profile can be either complex or simple depending on the building's style.
The plinth cornice separates the plinth from the main wall. It emphasizes the building's foundation, creates a visual support. Often the plinth cornice is complemented by rustication—an imitation of stone masonry made of large blocks.
Facade cornices made of polyurethaneare mounted with special facade adhesive or mounting foam with additional mechanical fixation using dowels. The joints between cornice sections are carefully fitted at a 45-degree angle on building corners or butted on straight sections, sealed, and become invisible after painting.
Rustication: imitation of stone masonry
Rustication is a decorative element imitating the joint between large stone blocks. Rustication creates the illusion that the wall is built of ashlar stone, although in reality it is ordinary brick or blocks faced with plaster.
Corner rustications are installed vertically on the building corners, imitating corner masonry made of large blocks alternating in length (square-rectangular-square). This is a classic technique that gives the building corners monumentality and visual solidity.
Horizontal rustication divides the wall into horizontal belts, imitating rows of stone masonry. Usually used on the plinth part of the facade, on the first floor, creating the illusion of a powerful stone foundation.
Framing rustication surrounds windows and doors, highlighting the openings, making them resemble portals in a thick stone wall.
Polyurethane rusticationcomes in smooth (with an even surface) and textured (with imitation of roughly worked stone, chips, cracks) varieties. Smooth rustication is suitable for classical facades, textured—for stylization as medieval castles, fortresses, rustic houses made of rough stone.
Keystones: accents above windows and doors
A keystone is a projecting decorative element in the center of an arch or in the upper part of a window or door surround. In stone architecture, the keystone actually locked the arch, holding the structure. In decorative architecture, it is a purely ornamental element, creating an accent, attracting the eye.
Keystones can be simple (a rectangular projecting block) and complex (a carved composition with plant motifs, mascaron—masks of human or animal faces, coats of arms, cartouches). The size depends on the scale of the window: for small windows—15-20 cm in width, for large ones—30-50 cm and more.
The keystone is installed in the center of the window's or door's upper casing on the axis of symmetry. It can be flush with the casing or project forward by 30-70 mm, creating additional volume and shadow.
Pilasters and half-columns: vertical divisions
Pilasters are flat vertical elements imitating columns but adjoining the wall. They create a vertical rhythm on the facade, visually raise the building, make it more slender.
The structure of a pilaster is classical: base (foundation), shaft (vertical part), and capital (crowning part with decoration). The style of the capital determines belonging to an architectural order: Doric (simple capital without decoration), Ionic (capital with volutes-scrolls), Corinthian (capital with acanthus leaves).
Half-columns are volumetric elements projecting from the wall by half or one-third of the diameter of a full column. They create greater volume than pilasters but do not steal space like full columns.
Pilasters and half-columns are installed on the sides of entrance doors, frame groups of windows, are placed on building corners, and divide long walls into symmetrical sections.
Moldings and friezes: linear decor
Moldings are decorative strips with a profiled cross-section. They frame windows and doors, create panels on walls, separate the plinth from the wall, and emphasize cornices.
Friezes are horizontal bands with a repeating ornament. Classical motifs: meander (broken geometric line), egg and dart (oval and arrow-shaped elements), palmettes (fan-shaped stylized leaves), grapevine, acanthus leaves.
Moldings and friezes add detailing to the facade, make it multi-layered, complex, interesting to look at. But moderation is important—too much decor overloads the facade, makes it heavy, garish.
Brackets, corbels, and balusters
Brackets are decorative supporting elements that visually support balconies, cornices, canopies. In reality, they do not bear loads (the function is carried by a hidden metal frame), but create the illusion of support, add volume and complexity.
Consoles — similar elements, usually in the form of scrolls, leaves, ornamental compositions. They are installed under cornices, under balcony slabs, on the sides of windows and doors.
Balusters — these are shaped posts of balustrades (railings) of balconies, terraces, stairs. A classic baluster has a complex profile: expansions, contractions, decorative belts. A row of balusters between the bottom and top rails forms a balustrade — a characteristic element of classical facades.
Resistance to temperatures and moisture: testing by the elements
Theory is good, but how does polyurethane decor behave in real operating conditions? Does it withstand the harsh Russian climate with its frosts, thaws, downpours?
Operating temperature range
Quality facade polyurethane retains its properties in a temperature range from -50°C to +80°C. This covers the entire range of climatic conditions in Russia — from the subtropics of Sochi to the frosts of Yakutia.
At low temperatures, polyurethane does not become brittle or crack. The material retains elasticity, the ability to absorb minor deformations during thermal expansion and contraction of the substrate.
At high temperatures, polyurethane does not soften, deform, or flow. Even on a hot summer day when a dark wall heats up to +60...+70°C, the decor retains its shape.
Behavior during temperature fluctuations
Sharp temperature fluctuations are more dangerous than constant temperature. Spring and autumn cycles: +10°C during the day, -10°C at night. Moisture penetrated microcracks, froze, expanded, destroyed the structure. This is how concrete, stone, and plaster on facades perish.
Polyurethane, due to its closed pore structure, does not let water inside. No water — no expansion upon freezing — no destruction. Furthermore, the coefficient of thermal expansion of polyurethane is close to that of most building materials (brick, concrete, plaster). This means that during temperature fluctuations, the decor and substrate expand and contract synchronously, without the decor detaching from the wall.
Moisture resistance in detail
Rain is a constant companion of facades. Driving rain soaks walls, water runs off, accumulates in recesses of the decor, penetrates joints. Plaster stucco in such conditions absorbs water, darkens, becomes covered with mold, and deteriorates.
Polyurethane does not absorb water. Water absorption of quality facade polyurethane is less than 1% by volume (for comparison: plaster — 15-20%, wood — 8-15%). Water simply runs off the surface, not lingering, not penetrating inside.
Even if water gets into the joint between decor elements (insufficient sealing), it will not cause harm. Polyurethane does not rot, mold does not grow on it, it does not swell. After drying, the material returns to its original state.
Bio-resistance
The facade is an environment where microorganisms are active. Mold, fungus, moss, lichens — all of this grows on damp surfaces, especially on the shaded northern side of a building. Wood in such conditions turns black within a year. Plaster becomes covered with a green coating.
Polyurethane is inert to biological impact. Microorganisms do not grow on it because the material is not a nutrient medium. Even in a humid climate, on the shaded sidepolyurethane decor for the facaderemains clean, without mold or coating.
Additional protection is provided by facade paint, which contains biocides — substances that suppress the growth of microorganisms. Properly painted polyurethane decor retains its pristine appearance for decades without special treatment.
Installation on various types of facades: versatility of application
Buildings are constructed from different materials: brick, concrete blocks, wood, frame structures. Facades are finished differently: plaster, siding, facing brick, facade panels, insulated systems. And for each type of facade, there are nuances for installing polyurethane decor.
Brick and block walls
Brick, aerated concrete, ceramic blocks — these are strong substrates that hold polyurethane decor excellently. Installation is done using polymer adhesive or polyurethane mounting foam with additional mechanical fixation for large elements.
Preparation. The wall is cleaned of dust, dirt, efflorescence (white coating). If the surface is loose, porous — it is primed with a deep penetration compound to strengthen and improve adhesion.
Adhesive. Special adhesive for polyurethane (such as Ceresit CT-84, Tytan Styro 753) or polyurethane mounting foam is used. The adhesive is applied to the back of the element in a snake pattern or dots. Not in a solid layer — excess will squeeze out and stain the wall.
Installation. The element is applied to the wall according to the markings, pressed firmly. Held for 30-60 seconds until the adhesive sets. Fixed with painter's tape or temporary props for 24 hours until the adhesive fully cures.
Mechanical fastening. For heavy elements (long cornices, large rustications, half-columns), additional dowels are used. A hole is drilled through the decor into the wall, a dowel is inserted, a screw is tightened. The screw head is countersunk, the hole is filled with putty, and becomes invisible after painting.
Plastered facades
Plaster is a good substrate if it is strong. A simple test: tap on the plaster. A dull sound — it holds firmly. A ringing, hollow sound — it has delaminated, holds poorly. Decor is not installed on a poor substrate — it will fall off along with the plaster.
If the plaster is solid, installation is similar to installation on brick. If it is questionable — only mechanical fastening with dowels is used, which pass through the plaster and are anchored into a solid base (brick, blocks).
Wooden facades
Wood (timber, logs, frame houses with wooden cladding) is a living material that breathes and changes dimensions with humidity fluctuations. In summer, humidity increases and wood swells. In winter — it dries out. These movements create problems for rigidly glued decor.
Solution — combined fastening. Adhesive ensures tight fit, screws provide reliability during movements. Stainless or galvanized screws (ordinary ones rust, and rust bleeds through the paint) are screwed in at 40-60 cm intervals. The heads are countersunk, filled with putty, and painted.
Insulated facades (wet facade, ventilated facade)
Modern buildings often have insulated facades: insulation (polystyrene foam, mineral wool) is attached to the wall, then it is reinforced with mesh and covered with a thin layer of plaster. Such a base is weak — a thin plaster layer will not support heavy decor.
Polyurethane is ideal here due to its low weight. Installation is done with adhesive for polystyrene foam (Ceresit CT-83, CT-84) with mandatory additional mechanical fastening using plastic dowels for insulation (with wide mushroom caps). The dowels pass through the insulation and are anchored into the main wall.
Facades with siding
If the facade is clad with siding (vinyl, metal), installing decor has its specifics. Siding is a ventilated system; there is a gap between the panels and the wall. Gluing decor onto siding is pointless.
There are two solutions. First: at the installation location, the siding is cut out, the framing is reinforced, and a rigid base (plywood, OSB) is created, to which the decor is attached. Second: the decor is attached over the siding using long screws that pass through the siding, framing, and are anchored into the wall. The first option is more complex but more reliable and aesthetically pleasing.
Painting facade molding: protection and aesthetics
Polyurethane elements are supplied white, primed. Primer is a preparation for painting, not a finish coating. Painting is mandatory — it protects the material, extends its service life, and creates the final visual effect.
Paint Selection
Only paints for exterior use are used for facade decor: acrylic, silicone, silicate. They contain UV filters (protection against fading), biocides (against mold), frost-resistant components, and elastic binders (the coating does not crack during thermal deformations).
Acrylic paints. The most common. Good coverage, vapor permeability, wide color palette, affordable price. Service life 5-10 years depending on paint quality.
Silicone paints. More expensive but more durable. Excellent vapor permeability, hydrophobicity (water does not linger, runs off), dirt-repellent properties (the facade stays cleaner longer). Service life 10-15 years.
Silicate paints. Mineral paints based on liquid glass. The most durable (15-20 years), vapor permeable, but limited color palette (predominantly pastel tones) and high price.
For polyurethane decor, acrylic and silicone paints are best suited. They provide a balance of price, quality, and durability.
Painting technology
Priming. Although elements are supplied primed, additional priming before painting improves paint adhesion and reduces its consumption. Exterior primer is applied with a brush or roller in a thin layer. Drying time 2-4 hours.
First coat of paint. Applied with a brush (for working on relief details) and a roller (for smooth surfaces). The brush should be high-quality, with dense bristles, so the paint penetrates all the recesses of the ornament. The roller — with short pile (4-8 mm) for a smooth texture. Paint consumption for the first coat — 150-250 ml per square meter.
Second coat of paint. Applied 4-6 hours after the first (time depends on the paint, indicated on the packaging). The second coat evens out the coating, creates the final color, and enhances protection. Consumption is lower — 100-150 ml per square meter.
Protective coating. For additional protection and increased service life, the painted decor can be coated with a clear exterior varnish or water repellent. This creates an additional barrier against moisture, dirt, and microorganisms. The service life of the coating increases by 30-50%.
Color Solutions
White. The classic of facade decor. White decor on colored walls creates clear graphics, elegance, and freshness. There are many shades of white: cool snow white, warm milky, ivory. Choose based on the overall facade palette.
Matching the wall color. A monochrome solution where the decor is painted the same color or a close shade as the walls. The decor works only through relief, play of light and shadow, not standing out by color. Creates calmness, sophistication, elegance.
Contrasting. Dark decor on light walls or vice versa. Creates drama, graphic quality, modernity. Characteristic of Scandinavian architecture, contemporary minimalism.
Material imitation. Painting to resemble wood, stone, metal. Polyurethane can take on any texture, color. You can create the illusion of carved wooden decor, stone molding, bronze or copper elements.
Patination. A multi-layer technique to create an aged effect. A base light layer, a dark accent layer in the recesses, light sanding of the raised areas. The decor looks not new, but as if it has a history, a noble patina of time.
Service life and guarantees: an investment in durability
How long will it lastPolyurethane molding allows creating a stylish and presentable exterior of a house, while the material retains its qualities in any weather conditions.? This is a critical question because installing decor is an investment, and you want it to pay off with long service without problems.
Calculated service life
Manufacturers of high-quality facade polyurethane claim a service life of 30-50 years. This is not a marketing exaggeration, but a reality confirmed by years of operation in different climatic zones.
Polyurethane installed in the 1990s on facades in Europe and the USA is still in excellent condition. The material has not cracked, deformed, and has retained its shape and color (provided periodic repainting every 10-15 years).
In Russian conditions (harsher climate, large temperature fluctuations) the realistic service life is 30-40 years. This significantly exceeds gypsum stucco (5-10 years on a facade) and is comparable to stone (50-100 years, but at a much higher cost).
Factors affecting longevity
Material quality. Not all polyurethane decor is the same. Cheap products made from low-density polyurethane (200-250 kg/m³) without UV stabilizers deteriorate in 5-10 years. High-quality facade polyurethane (density 350-450 kg/m³, UV stabilization, frost resistance) lasts for decades. Saving on material results in the need for early repairs.
Installation quality. Proper surface preparation, reliable fastening, thorough sealing of joints — this accounts for 50% of durability. Poor installation (weak base, insufficient fastening, unsealed joints) will lead to peeling, cracks, water ingress behind the decor, and premature deterioration.
Painting quality. Painting is not just cosmetics, it's protection. Paint protects polyurethane from UV radiation, moisture, dirt, and microorganisms. Poor paint (interior paint used on a facade, applied in one thin layer) will deteriorate in 2-3 years, leaving the decor unprotected. High-quality facade paint in 2-3 layers protects for 10-15 years.
Climatic conditions. In mild climates (southern regions, coastal areas) decor lasts longer. In harsh climates (Siberia, the North) — it experiences greater stress, but quality material withstands it. In industrial areas with polluted air, decor gets dirty faster and requires more frequent washing.
Maintenance. Minimal maintenance extends service life. Inspect the decor once a year, wash off dust and dirt, touch up damaged areas if necessary, and renew joint sealing. This is not difficult, takes a few hours, but adds years of service.
Manufacturer Guarantees
Serious manufacturers provide a warranty for facade polyurethane. A typical warranty is 5-10 years against manufacturing defects (cracks, deformations, material delamination). The warranty does not cover defects arising from improper installation, use, or painting.
A warranty is an indicator of the manufacturer's confidence in product quality. The absence of a warranty or a very short warranty (1-2 years) is a warning sign, indicating low material quality.
Frequently Asked Questions about Polyurethane Facade Molding
How does facade polyurethane differ from interior polyurethane?
Facade polyurethane has increased density (350-450 kg/m³ vs. 250-300 kg/m³), contains UV stabilizers and frost-resistant additives. Interior polyurethane is not intended for outdoor use — it will deteriorate in 3-5 years under the influence of ultraviolet light, moisture, and frost.
Can polyurethane be painted in dark colors?
Yes, but with a caveat. Dark surfaces heat up significantly in the sun (up to +70...+80°C). High-quality polyurethane can withstand such heating, but cheap polyurethane may deform. Use only high-quality facade polyurethane for dark painting. Also, note that dust is more visible on dark surfaces, requiring more frequent washing.
Is it necessary to remove old decor before installing polyurethane decor?
If the old decor (gypsum, wood) is firmly in place, polyurethane can be installed over or next to it. If the old decor is deteriorating or peeling — it needs to be removed, the surface cleaned, and only then should new decor be installed. Installation on a poor base will lead to peeling.
Does polyurethane burn?
Polyurethane is a combustible material (flammability group G3-G4). It is not intended for use in areas with high fire safety requirements (escape routes, fire barriers). But for ordinary facade decor, this is not a problem — the decor is located outside and does not come into contact with ignition sources. In the event of a fire inside the building, facade decor does not contribute to flame spread.
Can polyurethane decor be installed in winter?
Installation is possible at temperatures not lower than -10°C using frost-resistant adhesive or mounting foam. At lower temperatures, adhesive loses adhesion, making installation unreliable. It is optimal to install during warm weather (+5...+25°C), when adhesive works as intended.
How much does it cost to decorate a facade with polyurethane?
The cost depends on the facade area, the quantity and complexity of the decor, and labor costs in the region. Approximately: linear meter of cornice with installation — 800-2000 rubles, window casing with keystone — 4000-8000 rubles, comprehensive decoration of a 150-200 m² house facade — 150,000-400,000 rubles. This is 2-3 times cheaper than using gypsum or stone.
Does polyurethane decor require special care?
Minimal. Wash with water once a year to remove dust and dirt (by hand with a sponge or with a low-pressure power washer). Inspect the condition of the paint and joint sealing. Repaint every 10-15 years to renew the protective coating. No impregnation, antiseptic treatment, or other complex procedures are required.
Does polyurethane decor differ in appearance from gypsum or stone decor?
With quality manufacturing and proper painting — practically no difference. Polyurethane reproduces the finest relief details as clearly as gypsum or stone. Painted to imitate stone, it is visually indistinguishable. Differences are only noticeable upon close inspection and tactile contact (polyurethane feels warm to the touch, stone feels cold).
Conclusion: A facade that speaks of taste
A facade without decor is a box. Functional, perhaps, but lacking soul, character, individuality. A facade with quality decor is an architectural statement that speaks of the owner's taste, understanding of proportions, and commitment to beauty.
And creating such a facade today is accessible to everyone thanks to polyurethane technologies. You don't need to be a millionaire to adorn a house with classical cornices and pilasters. You don't need to wait years for stone stucco to be made. You don't need to fear that in five years the decor will crumble and require replacement.
Facade decoration made of polyurethane— is a sensible choice that combines beauty and practicality, tradition and innovation, affordability and durability. In a few days, your house will gain individuality, become recognizable, and stand out among neighboring buildings.
Start small. Install cornices under the roof, frame windows with architraves and keystones, add corner rustications. See how the facade transforms. Feel the house gaining its face. And perhaps you'll want to continue: add pilasters, friezes, consoles, create a full-fledged classical architectural composition.
STAVROS Company is your reliable partner in creating beautiful facades. We manufacture and supply a full range of premium-quality polyurethane facade moldings. Material density 350-450 kg/m³, UV stabilization, frost resistance 300+ cycles, geometric precision, sharp relief — these are STAVROS standards that guarantee durability and beauty.
Our assortment includes hundreds of cornice profiles, rustications of all sizes, keystones and consoles from simple to carved, pilasters and half-columns of all orders, moldings and friezes with ornaments, balusters and brackets. Everything to create the facade of your dreams.
We offer not just materials, but a comprehensive solution. Architectural consultations on element selection and style. Calculation of required material quantities. Recommendations for installation and finishing. Educational materials and video instructions. Delivery across all of Russia. Quality guarantee on all products.
With STAVROS, facade decoration transforms from a complex construction project into an engaging creative process with a predictably beautiful result. We know everything about facade moldings because we have been manufacturing them for many years, constantly improving technologies, expanding the assortment, and raising quality to European standards.
Your house deserves to be beautiful. Your facade can speak of taste, culture, and an understanding of architecture. Begin the transformation with STAVROS — and let your house become a model that neighbors will look up to, that guests will admire, and that you will be proud of every day.