Electric louver panels for an enclosed wellness space with indoor–outdoor passage
The wellness room closes off with electric louver panels, and that single move sets the tone for the whole extension. The slats sit in front of the glass and turn the space into a protected room when needed, filtering sun and blocking direct views. From outside, the panels read as a calm screen; from inside, they keep the indoor pool connected to the light and the garden without exposing everything at once.
Slats that switch the room from open to private
The panels work as electric louver panels privacy in a very direct way. When they are closed, the wellness area becomes a sheltered interior with a measured edge. The horizontal slats give the glass openings a second layer, so the room can answer changing conditions across the day. Sun moves across the surface, shadows shift along the frames, and the space can be closed without losing the clear geometry of the opening behind it.
That effect is visible immediately in the contrast between the dark louvered surface and the lighter walls around it. The slats do more than cover the opening. They shape the view, hold back direct sunlight, and make the room feel less exposed from the terrace and garden. Because the panels are electrically operated, the change from open to closed is part of how the room is used, not a separate gesture added to it.
An opened louver passage between pool and terrace
The central pair of panels opens fully to the outside, creating an opened louver passage instead of a screened wall. That opening changes the entire route through the space. One moment the wellness room is enclosed; the next, a clear passage appears between the interior and the terrace. The panel leaves swing outward, and the room gains a direct line from the indoor pool to the garden edge.
In summer, that opening makes a very specific scene possible: sunbathing outside, swimming inside, and moving between the two without a hard break. The project does not rely on a grand threshold. It uses the louver panels themselves as the moving element that frames the transition. The result is a practical indoor outdoor flow built into the architecture of the room, rather than added around it.
Indoor pool with glass openings and a clear edge
Inside, the pool sits beneath large glass openings and black-framed glazing. The water is lined with green mosaic tiles, which give the basin a distinct surface and make the shape of the pool easy to read. Around it, the glass keeps the room open to the surrounding terrace while the louver system handles privacy and sun shading. The contrast between tile, glass and slats gives the room a precise, layered character.
Other interior views show how the pool aligns with lounge seating and the glazed partition details near the room’s edge. The setting remains simple, but never flat. Reflections move across the water, the frames cut the opening into clear rectangles, and the pool’s narrow edge holds the composition together. It is a wellness room designed around lines, not decoration.
Indirect LED wellness lighting along the ceiling
The ceiling adds another layer through indirect LED wellness lighting. Light runs along the perimeter and across the upper edges, so the room is illuminated without harsh points drawing attention to themselves. In the images, the line of light traces the ceiling and follows the room’s corners, while round downlights appear as a second, quieter layer. This keeps the pool area readable at night and gives the white surfaces a softer depth.
Because the lighting sits back from the glazing, it works with the glass openings rather than competing with them. The ceiling remains light and controlled, and the reflections on the water become part of the view. Even in the darker moments, the wellness room keeps its structure: pool, glass, slats, and a ceiling edge that carries the light.
The terrace and garden beyond the screened opening
Outside, the louver panels continue as a screening system along the terrace side of the extension. Dark panel surfaces sit against white walls, with paving and a strip of lawn running along the base. The setting is spare and legible. You can read the boundary of the wellness room, the edge of the terrace, and the line where the garden begins. The panels hold that edge in place while leaving the opening flexible when needed.
One image shows the panel structure close up, with the frames and horizontal lamellas clearly visible. Another frames the exterior with grass, paving, and the screened opening beside the glazed wall. That combination explains the project well: the louver panels are not only a privacy layer, they are also the element that lets the extension move between enclosure and exposure. The room can close down, open out, or sit somewhere in between.
How the system shapes the whole wellness extension
What stands out is the way the electric louver panels organize the wellness extension without overpowering it. They sit in front of the glass, answer the need for sun shading louver panels, and make the change between inside and outside easy to read. The opening in the middle is especially effective because it is not symbolic; it is a real passage, sized and placed to alter how the room is used on a summer day.
That practical motion gives the space its rhythm. Closed panels make the room intimate and controlled. Open panels create a direct view through to the terrace and garden. Between those two states, the indoor pool with glass openings, the ceiling light, and the screened exterior all stay visible. The project is built around that shifting edge, where privacy, sunlight and movement meet in one adjustable frame.
Details that keep the room legible
The strongest details are also the simplest: the horizontal lamellas, the black window frames, the green mosaic tile around the pool, and the line of indirect light at the ceiling. Each one helps define a different layer of the room. The slats control the opening, the glazing keeps the room open to views, the tile marks the water, and the lighting traces the top edge so the space remains clear after dark. Nothing is overworked, so the parts remain easy to read.
Seen as a whole, the wellness area is less about a fixed appearance than about a sequence of states. The louver panels close the room, open the passage, and shape the way the extension meets the terrace and garden. That is where the project becomes most convincing: in the movement between enclosure and openness, and in the measured way the panels let the indoor pool stay part of the larger setting.
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