Architectural Infill Planning

Designer Metal Fencing

Designer metal fencing at Perimtec is about decorative and perforated infill within structured framed systems, including corrugated steel finishes that create a metal fence that looks like wood. It is best for projects where visual identity and material expression are priorities alongside practical boundary control.

Wood-Look Metal Fence

Metal Fence Finishes That Look Like Wood

Perimtec designer metal includes corrugated steel options that provide the appearance of wood with the durability and lower maintenance of metal. Use Vintage Pine or Dark Wood when the design calls for wood warmth in a metal fence system.

Vintage Pine wood-look designer metal fence panel in a Perimtec framed system.

Vintage Pine

A warm pine-style corrugated steel finish for a metal fence that looks like wood.

Dark Wood wood-look designer metal fence panel in a Perimtec framed system.

Dark Wood

A darker wood-look corrugated steel finish for modern privacy and architectural contrast.

Where Designer Panels Make Sense

  • Street-facing boundaries where architecture calls for custom visual rhythm.
  • Entry courts, patios, and side transitions that benefit from filtered visibility.
  • Projects that need a premium finish language across fence sections and gates.

If the primary goal is maximum screening, compare this page with metal privacy fence and corrugated metal fence options first.

Where Privacy Systems Are the Better Fit

Decorative infill is not always the right answer. Backyard privacy edges, pool-adjacent boundaries, and neighbor-facing lines often perform better with tighter-screening systems such as horizontal slat fence or other privacy-focused infill paths.

A hybrid scope is common: designer sections for visible front zones and higher-privacy sections for rear living areas.

Perimtec Framed-System Advantage

Framed systems keep panel reveals controlled so decorative infill looks intentional rather than improvised. This is especially important when perforation pattern, alignment, and finish transitions are part of the design brief.