Immersive Presentation Website for a Premium Door Manufacturer
The Challenge
The client is an entrance door manufacturer with 25+ years on the market, 2,500+ models in the catalog, and a defect rate of 0.003%. The product is objectively strong. The problem — the website looked like everyone else's. In a niche where buyers decide with their eyes and emotions, that's direct revenue loss.
The goal: build a website that itself becomes an argument for buying. One that says: "A company that builds a website like this builds doors like this."
The Solution
I designed a scroll-driven presentation website with an immersive mechanic: the user doesn't scroll down the page — content changes inside a fixed viewport. Each "slide" is a separate scene with a 3D object, atmospheric lighting, and an animated transition.
The concept was built with Awwwards in mind — where the winners aren't just beautiful websites, but websites with an idea.
What was done:
3D as the main character. A door is a physical object with weight, texture, and detail. I placed it at the center of every screen like a museum exhibit — on a pedestal, under the right light, inviting a closer look. The user doesn't read about the door. They experience it.
Dark atmosphere = premium signal. Deep burgundy-black background, focused product lighting, gold accents. The visual language of jewelry and automotive brands — brought into the door industry for the first time.
The configurator as the climax. The interactive configurator follows the same immersive logic: the user customizes the door directly in the 3D scene, in real time. This isn't a form with checkboxes — it's a showroom in their home.
Metrics that sell. 2,500 models, 4 factories, 5+ countries, 99.97% defect-free — each figure delivered as its own scene with visual weight. Not a table in the footer. A statement.
Full mobile adaptation (375px). The immersive concept is preserved on mobile: same scenes, same atmospheric lighting, mechanics rethought for touch gestures.
The Result
The website was designed not as a navigation tool — but as a tool of desire. Mission accomplished: a person who lands on the site wants the door before they've even seen the price.
For Potential Clients
If your product is better than how it looks online — you're losing money every day. I build websites that sell through emotion and visual experience. I work with premium e-commerce, manufacturers, and brands that have something worth showing.
The client is an entrance door manufacturer with 25+ years on the market, 2,500+ models in the catalog, and a defect rate of 0.003%. The product is objectively strong. The problem — the website looked like everyone else's. In a niche where buyers decide with their eyes and emotions, that's direct revenue loss.
The goal: build a website that itself becomes an argument for buying. One that says: "A company that builds a website like this builds doors like this."
The Solution
I designed a scroll-driven presentation website with an immersive mechanic: the user doesn't scroll down the page — content changes inside a fixed viewport. Each "slide" is a separate scene with a 3D object, atmospheric lighting, and an animated transition.
The concept was built with Awwwards in mind — where the winners aren't just beautiful websites, but websites with an idea.
What was done:
3D as the main character. A door is a physical object with weight, texture, and detail. I placed it at the center of every screen like a museum exhibit — on a pedestal, under the right light, inviting a closer look. The user doesn't read about the door. They experience it.
Dark atmosphere = premium signal. Deep burgundy-black background, focused product lighting, gold accents. The visual language of jewelry and automotive brands — brought into the door industry for the first time.
The configurator as the climax. The interactive configurator follows the same immersive logic: the user customizes the door directly in the 3D scene, in real time. This isn't a form with checkboxes — it's a showroom in their home.
Metrics that sell. 2,500 models, 4 factories, 5+ countries, 99.97% defect-free — each figure delivered as its own scene with visual weight. Not a table in the footer. A statement.
Full mobile adaptation (375px). The immersive concept is preserved on mobile: same scenes, same atmospheric lighting, mechanics rethought for touch gestures.
The Result
The website was designed not as a navigation tool — but as a tool of desire. Mission accomplished: a person who lands on the site wants the door before they've even seen the price.
For Potential Clients
If your product is better than how it looks online — you're losing money every day. I build websites that sell through emotion and visual experience. I work with premium e-commerce, manufacturers, and brands that have something worth showing.