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Tactile Wayfinding Solutions
Blind spots along walls, corridors, warehouse aisles, parking garage routes, building service areas and loading zones can make it difficult to see approaching pedestrians, carts, forklifts, vehicles or equipment before they enter a shared path. Half Dome Mirrors provide 180-degree overhead visibility, making them a practical solution for locations where visibility is needed across a wide area but not in every direction. They are commonly used at three-way intersections, T-intersections, corridor ends, wall-side aisle crossings, garage ramp corners and other locations where a full dome mirror may provide more coverage than the space requires.
Choosing the right half dome mirror depends on the viewing distance, mounting height, width of the area, traffic volume and the type of movement taking place around the blind spot. Smaller mirrors are often suitable for compact indoor corridors or short sightlines, while larger half dome mirrors are better for wider aisles, higher ceilings, parking structures or areas where people need to identify movement from farther away. Half dome mirrors are typically mounted against a wall or flat surface using the provided mounting clips, and they may be used in selected limited-exposure outdoor areas; however, they are not recommended for high-wind locations.
Half dome mirrors are used where visibility is needed across a wide area from one side of a wall, corridor, aisle or blind approach. They are commonly installed at T-intersections, wall-side aisle crossings, corridor ends, parking garage routes, warehouse paths and garage ramp corners where drivers, pedestrians or equipment operators need to see approaching movement before entering a shared path. A half dome mirror is typically the right choice when you need approximately 180-degree visibility, but not full 360-degree coverage. If movement approaches from every direction, a full dome mirror may be a better fit; if visibility is only needed at a tight corner, a quarter dome or convex mirror may be more appropriate.
A half dome mirror provides 180-degree visibility and is usually mounted along a wall or flat surface where visibility is needed across one side of an area. A full dome mirror provides 360-degree overhead visibility and is better suited for four-way intersections or open areas where movement may approach from every direction. The right choice depends on the layout: use a half dome mirror for wall-side or T-intersection visibility, and use a full dome mirror when the blind spot needs to be monitored from all directions.