Woven wire has been a staple of industrial manufacturing for decades. But architects and interior designers have increasingly turned to it as a serious design and functional material.
Lightweight, durable, and available in a wide range of weave patterns and metals, it works across new builds and refurbishment projects alike.
Here are five ways it is being used in architecture today.
1. Façade Cladding and Rainscreens
Building façades are under more scrutiny than ever. Architects want materials that perform well and look distinctive from the street. Woven wire mesh panels deliver on both counts.
As a rainscreen cladding material, woven wire sits in front of the building’s weatherproofing layer, allowing air to circulate while protecting the substrate behind. The open weave allows for natural ventilation, reduces solar gain, and gives a building a striking, textured appearance that changes with the light throughout the day.
It is available in stainless steel, brass, bronze, and corten, which means the colour and finish can be tailored to the wider design intent. Corten, for example, develops a warm, rust-like patina over time that suits heritage settings and industrial conversions alike.
Materials Commonly Used for Façade Applications:
- Stainless steel (high corrosion resistance, clean appearance)
- Corten steel (self-patinating, suited to industrial aesthetics)
- Brass and bronze (warmer tones for premium or heritage projects)
2. Interior Partitions and Feature Walls
Open-plan offices, hospitality venues, and high-end residential interiors all face the same challenge: how to divide a space without closing it off. Woven wire mesh is one of the most effective answers to that problem.
Framed mesh panels work well as room dividers, behind reception desks, or as decorative feature walls. The semi-transparent nature of the material lets light pass through, keeping spaces feeling open while still providing a clear visual boundary. In restaurant and hotel settings, this is particularly useful for creating distinct zones within a larger floor plate.
The weave pattern itself also becomes part of the design. Tighter weaves offer a refined, almost fabric-like appearance. Coarser weaves carry a more industrial character. Either way, the material adds texture and depth in a way that solid partitions simply cannot.
3. Balustrades and Stair Infill Panels
Glass has dominated balustrade design for years, but metal woven wire is gaining ground as an alternative that is both practical and visually interesting.
Used as infill panels in balustrades and stair surrounds, woven wire offers good visibility, meets building regulation requirements for infill spacing, and holds up well to the wear and tear of high-traffic environments. It is particularly well suited to commercial staircases, mezzanine floors, and industrial-style interiors.
Please Note: Balustrade infill panels must comply with UK Building Regulations Part K, which specifies maximum openings to prevent climbing or entrapment. Always confirm specification details with your structural engineer.
For those working on construction or fit-out projects, woven wire for architecture is available in fabricated panel form, which simplifies installation and allows for consistent sizing across a project.
4. Ceiling Installations and Acoustic Baffles
Suspended metal mesh ceilings have become a popular choice in commercial interiors, from airports to retail environments to corporate offices. They offer a clean, contemporary look while allowing services such as lighting, sprinklers, and HVAC to remain visible or partially concealed above.
Woven metal mesh is also increasingly being specified as part of acoustic strategies. When combined with absorbent materials behind the mesh layer, it helps manage reverberation in large, hard-surfaced spaces. This makes it a practical choice in restaurants, open-plan workplaces, and public buildings where noise levels can be a real problem.
Did You Know? The angle and density of a woven wire weave affects how much light it reflects or absorbs, which means ceiling mesh can be used to actively shape the perceived brightness of a room.
5. Security Enclosures and Plant Screening
Not all architectural uses of woven wire are purely aesthetic. In commercial and industrial settings, it plays an important functional role in enclosing plant rooms, electrical equipment, and mechanical infrastructure.
Woven wire enclosures are strong, allow for ventilation (which matters around electrical and HVAC equipment), and can be finished to suit their surroundings. In a retail or hospitality context, mechanical plant can be screened without blocking airflow, and without resorting to solid panels that look out of place.
Used externally, the same approach works well for rooftop plant screening, bin stores, and service yard enclosures, where the goal is containment and visual tidiness without compromising airflow.