David Jack - Website Design
Dark, bold, and built to impress — David Jack's construction company website makes "Powerful Design" feel like a promise the building in the hero image has already kept.

Web Design — David Jack
Website Design · Construction Company · Corporate Web
A striking, high-contrast website design for David Jack — a construction company whose digital presence communicates the same qualities as its physical work: strength, precision, and visual authority. Presented in an iMac desktop mockup that grounds the design in its natural viewing context.
The hero section is built on a dramatic black-dominant palette — a full-width background mosaic of architectural project photography, desaturated to near-black, creating a rich textural depth that positions the company as an organization with a substantial portfolio behind every claim it makes. The visual effect is that of a construction legacy made tangible: every building they've touched, present on the page at once.
Center stage: a sharp, modern high-rise tower rendered in grey-silver architectural photography, its angular profile piercing upward with the kind of vertical ambition that only confident structural engineering produces. Beside it, the hero headline "POWERFUL DESIGN" is set in a bold, condensed white display typeface — maximum weight, maximum confidence. A bilingual subtext in Chinese characters beneath the English headline confirms the brand's international market orientation, communicating fluency across two of the world's most significant construction economies.
A gold CTA button — the site's single accent color — anchors the action call at the base of the hero text block, providing the warmth and premium signal that black-and-white corporate sites need to feel inviting rather than merely authoritative. The gold carries through into a horizontal accent bar at the footer section, tying the brand color system with quiet consistency.
A web design that looks as structural as the buildings it represents — and performs just as reliably.
Completed
March 2013
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