How a product designer used WPOS to build a complete 9-page care home website — 42 custom widgets, full design system, real content — in a single working session. No code editors. No handoffs. Just conversation.
Harmony House is a family-owned residential care facility in Henderson, Nevada offering assisted living for adults 65+, IDD residential care, and respite services. Their tagline — “A Home for Every Heart” — captures a brand built on warmth, family, and personalized attention.
The problem? Their existing website told a different story. It was riddled with dead links, placeholder content, a cluttered layout, and a generic clinical feel that contradicted everything the brand stood for. The client wanted a complete redesign — not a refresh, not a tweak — a ground-up rebuild that felt like luxury hospitality with heart.
To make things harder, the client had already rejected a first design attempt (V1). That version used a teal-navy-gold color scheme with boxy alternating cards — functional, but it read as “healthcare corporate,” not “warm, refined, family home.” The bar was clear: the next version had to nail the aesthetic on the first pass.
Ali, a product designer running client projects through his agency Pixelabs, needed to deliver a site that was aesthetically stunning — inspired by high-end editorial design, not cookie-cutter templates. It had to be minimalist and sophisticated with generous whitespace, serif/sans-serif typography contrast, and full-bleed photography. It had to be content-complete — 9 pages of real copy, real photos, real SEO — not a mockup. And it had to be built fast — the client was already waiting after V1 was scrapped.
Before a single pixel was designed, WPOS conducted competitive research. The system browsed 10+ marble industry websites across Pakistan – competitors in Abbottabad, larger operations in Islamabad and Lahore, established exporters.
This wasn’t surface-level browsing. It compiled: common page structures used in the marble and construction materials industry, how competitors presented product catalogs (by stone type, by application, by price range), what trust signals mattered (years in business, quarry ownership, delivery range), which design patterns worked for businesses selling physical products to local markets, and what was missing from competitor sites that could differentiate Dawood.
The research phase lasted about 15 minutes. The system analyzed real competitor websites and extracted patterns that would inform every design decision that followed. This is the kind of research that a traditional agency would charge for separately – and often skip entirely for budget clients.
With research complete, WPOS moved into design and build – simultaneously. There was no separate wireframing phase, no Figma mockups sent for approval, no back-and-forth on color palettes. The system generated a design system directly from the business context: earthy tones pulled from marble and granite textures, professional typography, and a layout structure informed by what worked in the competitive research.
The entire site was built section by section in a single conversation. A hero section with the business name and a compelling tagline. An about section covering the company’s 30-year history, quarry operations, and production facilities. A product catalog organized by stone type – marble, granite, onyx – with descriptions the owner provided in Roman Urdu, translated and polished into professional English copy. A services section covering cutting, polishing, installation, and custom orders. A projects gallery showcasing completed work. Contact information with location, phone, WhatsApp, and a contact form. And a footer tying everything together.
Each section was built as a custom widget, verified in the browser, and refined before moving to the next. The owner’s Roman Urdu descriptions like “yeh hamara sabse acha marble hai, bohot chamakdar” became professional product copy that accurately represented the business.
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