Maryon is a Saudi real estate developer whose portfolio spans luxury residential towers in Makkah and award-winning villas in Al Khobar. HoopAI was commissioned to design a company profile that could hold that ambition, one that reads less like a brochure and more like a manifesto for a new chapter in Gulf urbanism. The result is a bilingual publication built around a dominant dark palette: charcoal-textured cover stock, volcanic-rock contact spreads, and cinematic desert photography bookending the document with quiet gravitas.
The visual language alternates deliberately between deep-field darkness and warm, light-flooded interior photography. Chapter dividers open in near-black with oversized italic numerals and gold-tinted sub-brand lockups. Each project (Maryon Residence, Maryon Elite, Maryon Villa) is presented under its own bilingual identity, Latin and Arabic typeset in concert. Photography collages across the projects chapter layer rendered exteriors, show-unit interiors, and aerial location maps into compositional grids held together by serif headline overlays in restrained brown-tinted panels.
The typography pairs a geometric sans for body text and wayfinding with an italic serif for headings and section titles, a pairing that signals both institutional confidence and residential warmth. Leadership portraits are rendered in high-contrast black and white, framed with generous leading and flush-left alignment, giving the document a journalistic authority that distances it from conventional real estate marketing. Floor plans are presented with precision on clean white grounds, Arabic room labels set in the gold accent drawn from the brand's primary tone.
The back cover resolves on a single image: a desert dune ridge lit in gold against deep shadow, the brand tagline 'Building Dreams. Creating Legacy' in plain white caps. Every design decision in the document is in service of that line: the darkness, the warmth of the gold, the confidence of the white space. The profile positions Maryon not as a developer selling units, but as a builder of enduring environments.