Creation of plasterboard walls and furnishings
Already the most ancient populations, such as the Babylonians, the Chaldeans and the Egyptians, were well aware of the art of plaster, which was not even lost subsequently in the course of history, so much so that it reached its peak during the Baroque and Rococo periods.
Today gypsum is widely used both for decorative creations to which the material is excellently suited, and as a plaster, binder, monolithic building block


There can be many solutions in which this material is used.
Its merits are numerous: the walls created can be removed in the future or moved easily; it is easy to run cables for lighting, install electrical outlets and spotlights; it does not produce rubble and dust and once erected the structure is able to support shelves and shelves like a normal wall. The desire to change the look of our home, our apartment or our shop can lead us to imagine the creation of new walls within our environments.
Create a walk-in closet in a very large bedroom; better separate an entrance from the living area; create an anteroom with a small laundry room. Plasterboard can be the ideal solution and can effectively replace the traditional brick. Plasterboard is a building material formed by a layer of plaster sandwiched between two sheets of cardboard. It comes in the form of slabs 120 cm wide, 200 to 300 cm long, and with thicknesses ranging from 6 to 18 mm. Drywall needs a structure to be attached to. A plasterboard wall is made with a dry construction system, without the use of mortars or cements, but only simple screws and dowels. It consists of a metal structure, fixed to the floor, to the ceiling and to one or more walls, by a cavity that can be filled with insulating material, and by two external plasterboard slabs.