Wall Panels for Hotels: What Designers Specify and Why
Wall Panels for Hotels: The Specification Perspective
Hotel wall finishes are specified differently to residential finishes because the operational context is different. A wall that looks good on day one and struggles at year two in a guest room serviced by a housekeeping team and occupied by guests dragging suitcases is a maintenance problem and a cost. The spec has to account for the full operating life.
What the performance requirements look like
Guest rooms: the wall behind the bed takes the most contact - headboard impact, guests sitting against it, leaning. A flexible stone tile feature panel here handles contact damage better than painted plasterboard or wallpaper. Acoustic panels on the upper half improve sleep quality by reducing corridor sound transmission through the room's reflective surfaces. For full-room application, a carbon crystal or composite decorative panel with snap installation allows individual panels to be replaced if damaged without full room renovation.
Corridors: the lower 900 mm of corridor walls takes the most abuse - luggage wheels, housekeeping trolleys, door contact. Flexible tile at dado height (900 mm) with a neutral stone or brick texture handles this zone well. Above dado, wood slat acoustic panels reduce corridor reverberation, which is a genuine guest comfort issue.
Lobby and reception: this is the specification showcase. Curved reception columns wrapped in flexible stone veneer, a feature wall in travertine-effect flexible tile, a WavySlats panel behind the reception desk. The lobby has to read as premium at arrival and hold up to thousands of daily contacts at the reception counter.
Fire compliance for hospitality
In hotels, all wall finishes in guest corridors, escape routes, and public areas must meet Class B minimum (Euroclass) and in many jurisdictions Class A2 in stairwells and escape corridors. Obtain the fire test certificate for any product you specify - not just the product description.
Maintenance and lifecycle
Flexible tile: wipe-clean, no grout to discolour, minor surface damage invisible on textured finishes. 15-25 year expected life. Wood slat panels: dust and spot-clean, occasional oil or wax maintenance on natural wood. 10-15 year life in commercial use with proper maintenance. Decorative wall panels (laminate, composite): highest durability, easiest maintenance, lowest visual complexity - best for back-of-house and standard guest rooms.