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Level 5 surface
preparation

Surfaces that read as one system — with clean geometry, stable lines, and no visible defects under any lighting.

Why It Matters

The final result is defined at the preparation stage.
Most visible issues in finished interiors originate here.

What We Deliver

- perfectly flat, aligned surfaces
- clean corners and precise lines
- no visible defects or distortions
- consistency under all lighting conditions

Our Approach

We treat preparation as a controlled system — not a set of isolated fixes.
Every surface is inspected, corrected, and brought to a unified standard.

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How the Interior Is Really Seen

Surface preparation defines how the interior will actually look — not in drawings, but under real light, next to architectural details, and over time.

Where Precision Becomes Critical

Modern interiors rely on elements that do not tolerate inaccuracy: concealed doors, shadow gaps, flush baseboards, integrated lighting, and built-in fixtures. These solutions only work when the surrounding surfaces are controlled.

Where Most Problems Begin

In practice, most visual problems in a finished interior come from this stage. Not from paint, not from materials — from how the surface was prepared.

A Controlled System

We approach preparation as a controlled system, not a set of isolated fixes.

Three Parameters of the Result

Three parameters define the result: plane alignment, corner precision, and surface consistency.

Continuous Plane Across the Space

Surfaces are brought to a continuous level across the entire space.

Corners That Read Cleanly

Corners are formed to read as clean, stable lines.

Controlled Transitions

Transitions are controlled so that the eye does not detect breaks, steps, or distortions.

The Most Sensitive Areas

Particular attention is given to joints — the most sensitive and most visible part of any drywall system. Under light, this is where the surface fails first if not done correctly.

More Than a Smooth Surface

The goal is not simply to make the surface smooth. The goal is to make it behave correctly under light, within the geometry of the space, and next to architectural elements.

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