We are very excited to announce our debut interior, Integrity Lobby . What the interior consists of: Lobby Reception desk Waiting Lounge 6 Elevators Employee office Copy/File room
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The Integrity Tower Lobby MLO transforms one of Los Santos' most iconic skyscrapers into a fully accessible, professionally designed commercial space that brings corporate and business roleplay to life. This isn't just a cosmetic interior - it's a complete ground-floor office environment that captures the polished, high-stakes atmosphere of a premium business tower. Whether your server focuses on legal businesses, white-collar crime, corporate espionage, or mixed economic roleplay, this lobby provides the professional setting where business deals are negotiated, powerful people meet, and the line between legitimate enterprise and criminal enterprise gets very blurry. The attention to architectural detail and commercial functionality makes it perfect for servers that want to offer something beyond street crime and emergency services.
What sets the Integrity Tower Lobby apart is its versatility for multiple business and roleplay scenarios. The reception desk serves as a natural checkpoint for security roleplay and visitor management. The waiting lounge provides neutral ground for business meetings, job interviews, or tense negotiations between rival organizations. The six elevators aren't just decorative - they create natural transitions to upstairs offices (whether represented by separate MLOs or roleplay imagination), adding verticality and scale to your business district. The employee areas give staff characters dedicated workspaces. This MLO understands that corporate environments have specific spatial needs, and it delivers them with the polish and professionalism that makes business roleplay feel authentic rather than forced.
The reception desk is the command center of the lobby, where building security and administrative staff control who gets access to the tower. In roleplay terms, this becomes a critical checkpoint - receptionists verify appointments, security screens visitors for weapons, and unauthorized people get turned away or detained. This creates organic interaction opportunities: criminals needing to sweet-talk their way past security, undercover cops posing as business visitors, corporate spies attempting social engineering, or VIPs expecting immediate access regardless of protocol. The desk's positioning gives staff clear sightlines to entrances and waiting areas, supporting proper security roleplay without feeling like a fortress.
The waiting lounge serves as crucial neutral ground in corporate roleplay. It's not anyone's private office, so it feels safe for first meetings between parties who don't fully trust each other yet. Business partners can meet here before heading to private offices to finalize deals. Job candidates wait here before interviews, building tension and allowing characters to observe or interact before official meetings. The lounge also becomes a natural social space where different organizations' representatives might encounter each other, creating unexpected roleplay opportunities - rival businesspeople in the same waiting room, criminals recognizing each other while both pretending to be legitimate, or chance meetings that spark new storylines.
The six elevators create the crucial illusion of verticality that makes the Integrity Tower feel like an actual high-rise rather than just a ground-floor set. In practical terms, elevators serve as transition points - characters go upstairs to private offices (which might be separate MLO interiors, teleport destinations, or simply roleplay imagination). This vertical separation allows different organizations to occupy different floors without collision, supports penthouse offices for executives, and creates the multi-tenant building dynamic that mirrors real commercial real estate. The elevator count also prevents bottlenecks during busy periods when multiple parties are arriving or leaving simultaneously.
Installing the Integrity Tower Lobby follows standard MLO installation procedures - add to resources folder, include in server.cfg, and the interior loads at the designated location. The real setup work comes in integration with your server's business systems. You'll want to connect elevator interactions to teleport scripts if you're using separate office interiors, implement door locks to control building access hours, and potentially integrate with phone scripts so visitors can call upstairs to announce arrivals. The lobby pairs naturally with office-based job scripts, company management systems, and economic frameworks that support business ownership.
Most FiveM servers have plenty of criminal hideouts, police stations, and gang territories, but professional business environments? They're surprisingly rare. The Integrity Tower Lobby fills this gap with genuine commercial polish that makes business roleplay feel legitimate rather than like criminals playing dress-up. The design choices reflect actual corporate lobbies - the receptionist has clear sightlines and authority positioning, the waiting area balances comfort with surveillance, the elevators create controlled vertical access, and the overall aesthetic communicates serious business happens here without feeling sterile or unwelcoming. This environmental credibility is what makes the difference between players awkwardly standing in an office building and players actually embodying their corporate characters.
While the lobby supports legitimate business roleplay, it's equally valuable for sophisticated criminal operations. Money laundering fronts need this kind of professional veneer to appear legitimate to authorities. Corporate espionage scenarios can play out in the waiting area where spies attempt to intercept conversations or plant surveillance devices. Corrupt executives can meet with criminal organizations under the guise of legitimate business meetings. The reception desk becomes a social engineering challenge for criminals who need to access restricted areas. These white-collar crime scenarios add variety to server criminal roleplay beyond just street violence and drug dealing.
The lobby's design naturally supports corporate hierarchy roleplay. Executives breezing past reception with familiar waves while junior employees get stopped for ID checks. VIP visitors getting escorted directly to private elevators while regular clients wait in the lounge. Security staff wielding the authority to deny access even to wealthy players. These power dynamics create roleplay texture - characters building relationships with reception staff to ensure smooth access, executives flexing their status through how they're treated, or conflicts arising when security enforces rules against entitled visitors. The environmental structure provides the framework for these social hierarchies to emerge organically.
One of the lobby's greatest strengths is supporting multi-tenant building roleplay. Different companies can occupy different floors (whether actual separate interiors or roleplay concepts), all sharing the common lobby space. This creates natural interaction between diverse organizations - law firms in the same building as financial advisors, government offices sharing space with private businesses, or criminal fronts operating alongside legitimate companies. The elevator system allows different groups to have floor exclusivity while sharing ground-floor infrastructure, mimicking real commercial real estate dynamics and creating a business ecosystem rather than isolated offices.
From a security perspective, the lobby presents interesting challenges. Security staff must balance professional courtesy with vigilance, screening visitors without making everyone feel like suspects. For law enforcement, the lobby becomes a semi-public space where they can conduct interviews, serve subpoenas, or investigate white-collar crimes while navigating the political sensitivities of disturbing corporate operations. Search warrants need to be executed in professional environments where lawyers immediately appear. These scenarios add complexity to police roleplay beyond street stops and drug busts.
The waiting lounge area has sufficient space for small corporate events - press conferences, product launches, investor meetings, or emergency board gatherings. The professional environment lends credibility to these events in ways that improvised meeting spaces can't match. Companies can use the lobby for job fairs, networking events, or community outreach programs. The public-yet-controlled nature of the space makes it ideal for scenarios where organizations need to project professional image while maintaining security control.
For server economies, the Integrity Tower Lobby can serve as a hub for high-value transactions and professional services. Legal consultations, investment meetings, insurance claims, real estate transactions, business licenses, and corporate contracts all feel more legitimate when conducted in a professional office environment rather than back alleys or improvised locations. The lobby adds an economic tier above street-level commerce, supporting server economies that want to offer business ownership and corporate progression paths alongside traditional criminal and service jobs.
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