The world of interior design has long set its eyes on the color pink, a trend, a fashion, a marketing inspiration but above all a shade that embodies many meanings and also, a real story. For a long time, in fact, pink was considered a color with purely masculine characteristics: a sort of synthesis between the vital-red to which a touch of spirituality typical of white was added.
Later, pink was associated with femininity; the real media boom came thanks to the pop culture proposed by the communication of Barbie dolls that contributed to attributing powerful connotations and an almost stereotyped use to this color. Elevators and more generally the world of architecture could not fail to take this precise stylistic signature into account.
Doing a search on the internet, the list of hotels, fashion houses, shops that have focused on pink to give vitality to their elevators is really long.
Furthermore, according to Feng Shui or “environment-therapy”, the ancient Chinese discipline that studies how to arrange environments so that they release positive energy around us, pink is an important resource as its delicate vibrations have a proven calming effect on human behavior.
According to this discipline, pink is the perfect solution for high-density areas of a building, such as hotel halls and meeting places such as the elevator; according to Feng Shui, in fact, the color pink contains in itself the power to mitigate any negative or aggressive impulse.