Ventilation Rosettes
Ventilation rosettes combine function and design: they provide a clean cover for ventilation openings and visually integrate into period interiors.\n\nTypical use cases:\n- wall and door ventilation openings\n- secondary rooms, hallways, bathrooms and kitchens (depending on concept)\n- complement to panelling, mouldings and door surrounds\n\nSelect a rosette to view dimensions, variants and images.
Quick answer
- Ventilation rosettes combine heritage styling with controlled indoor airflow.
- They suit period interiors where technical elements should stay discreet.
- Shape, diameter, and placement should align with wall axes and panel layout.
- Best results come from planning rosettes together with mouldings and finishes.
Practical context
In practice, rosettes are often positioned inside wall panels or above door zones so airflow works without disturbing composition. In refurbishments, existing openings and routing constraints should be checked early.
Decisions & variants
Variants differ by diameter, ornament level, material expression, and mounting position. Minimal rosettes fit restrained interiors; richer profiles suit representative historic rooms.
Process & planning
Workflow: survey existing conditions, define airflow needs, fix positions in the wall composition, choose rosette size, prepare substrate, install, and integrate in final finish concept.
Cost logic
Cost logic mainly depends on number of openings, substrate adaptations, access complexity, and finishing work. Cross-trade coordination can increase planning effort.
Common mistakes & how to avoid them
Frequent mistakes are random placement without axis logic, oversized/undersized formats, and no coordination with mouldings or panelling. A coordinated installation plan prevents visual breaks.
References
- /en/products/ventilation-rosettes/
- /en/products/half-wainscoting/
- /en/products/high-wainscoting/
- /en/info/consulting/