Dimensions
Class A Fire Rated
Akutile is a light-weight acoustical panel for sound absorption and clean wood look.
+ 23.6 x 23.6" square panels
+ 0.5" wood veneer lamellas w/ a 0.5" gap on face
+ mounted on a 0.35" base of acoustical substrate made of recycled plastic water bottles (optional backing colors available for + $1.00 / SF/ 2 week additional leadtime)
+ easy installation for vertical and ceiling use
+ stocked in the USA
+ class c fire rated
+ class a fire rated availbale for +$1.00 / SF / 2 week additional lead time
Akutile Universal (Woven Pattern for Wall)
+ lip added around full perimeter of each tile
+ ideal for Installation where tiles can be rotated for a "woven" look)
Akutile Ceiling Tegular (Woven Pattern for Ceiling Grid)
+ lip added around full perimeter of each tile
+ specifically designed to install into a ceiling grid
+ protruding edge extends beyond the grid system
+ added support to avoid sagging
Akutile Wall Mounted (Paneled Pattern for Wall)
+ lip added to 2 sides for unique transitions
+ designed to be installed as a wall panel
Base Price: $20 per SF*
+ sold in ~4 SF increments
+ shipping + handling prices to be added and vary upon quantity + timeline
Born into the Architecture and Interior Design industry in the Hawaiian Islands, founder of SUMO, Nalani Sato developed an innate appreciation for the distinctive concoction of architectural styles present within the Hawaiian Islands early on. She later traveled the world, studied Fine Arts and returned home to Hawaii. She juggled regular informal modeling at Neiman Marcus, Chanel and Christian Dior, painting and more school between what started as a part-time gig at Architectural Surfaces, Inc., her Dad's business established in Honolulu in 1984. She started at the very bottom: sample organization. That is how she learned every single product, it's look, use and quality. Her job description later included administrative duties like customer service, placing orders, etc. as well as visual merchandising.
She is built to be what she is. Involved in art intersections, Nalani bridges the divide between