Now, let's talk about the rebel with a cause in the MCM family:
MCM Flexible Stone
. If Project Boards are the reliable workhorse, Flexible Stone is the creative free spirit. Picture this: a curved wall in a museum lobby, a wavy facade on a boutique café, or even a custom headboard in a luxury hotel suite. Traditional stone would throw up its hands and say, "Nope, too complicated." But Flexible Stone? It leans in.
What makes it so special? That modified cementitious material again—but this time, engineered to be bendable. It's thin (think 3-5mm thick), lightweight, and can wrap around curves, corners, and even cylindrical surfaces without cracking. It's like stone, but with the flexibility of fabric. Suddenly, architects aren't limited by "straight lines only"—they can let their creativity run wild.
But here's the thing about flexible materials: they require a gentle touch during installation. You can't just hammer them into place like rigid panels. That's where COLORIA's support shines brightest here. They provide detailed guides on how to measure, cut, and adhere Flexible Stone to different substrates—whether it's concrete, drywall, or metal. And if you're working with an especially tricky shape? Their technical team is a call away, offering virtual walkthroughs or even on-site demos to make sure you get that perfect, wrinkle-free finish.
Take, for example, a recent boutique hotel project in Riyadh. The design called for a lobby wall that mimicked the rolling sand dunes of the desert—soft, flowing, and entirely unique. The contractor initially hesitated, worried that traditional stone would never pull off that organic look. Enter COLORIA's Flexible Stone in a warm beige tone, paired with their installation team's tips on "segmented bending" (overlapping panels slightly to create a seamless wave). The result? A wall that guests now stop to photograph daily, with zero cracks or uneven edges. "It felt like sculpting, not just installing," the lead designer said. "And COLORIA was right there with us, making sure the vision didn't get lost in the process."