Globlazer F70 Pro: Engineering Stability at 70 Inches
A 70-inch cat tree is tall enough to feel like furniture. It stands in the same visual zone as shelves and lamps, and it has to live with that attention.
That is the design problem behind the Globlazer F70 Pro. At 70 inches, a tower cannot rely on height alone. It has to earn trust—through base proportion, platform confidence, and the kind of stability that reads as calm even before a cat uses it.
We introduced the F70 Pro in the United States on February 8, 2024, as a flagship height line for owners who wanted vertical space without visual chaos. The brief was familiar from earlier towers: furniture-style silhouette, neutral palette, routes cats repeat daily. At seventy inches, the brief got stricter—because every inch above eye level asks the base to answer more honestly.
The first decision was the footprint. We wanted a structure that feels planted without turning into a block beside the sofa. The F70 Pro ships in a carton sized 57 by 47 by 26 inches—dimensions chosen so the base plate and column stack travel protected while still fitting common freight lanes. On the floor, a wider base helps, but so does proportion: the silhouette should look slim from the ground, then become generous where cats actually spend time.
Mass distribution followed footprint. At roughly 17.7 kilograms, the F70 Pro carries weight low—into the base assembly—so the upper platforms stay visually light. Cats do not read spec sheets; they read whether the first leap feels answered. A planted base answers.
The second decision was the platform experience. A tall tower only works when the top feels believable. That meant designing perches wide enough for turning, with edges that support how cats shift weight when they settle. Mid-level decks matter too: winter afternoons and multi-cat mornings load platforms off-center. We sized landings for those real habits, not for symmetric product photos.
The third decision was finish and color. F70 Pro arrives in Beige, Dark Grey, and Light Grey—because a tower this tall does not get to be an accent that clashes. It has to behave like a neutral object in the room, the way a rug or a chair does. Sisal columns stay on climb routes; plush platforms borrow upholstery logic—matte, short pile, surfaces that recover after kneading.
Stability was part of the design conversation from the first sketch, not a separate phase at the end. We widened ground contact, reinforced the core column path, and adjusted platform proportions until the climb felt secure even for a cat that launches to the top in one motion. That work is invisible in the living room. It shows up when owners stop hesitating before the tower enters the main sightline.
F70 Pro is a stability story, but not an engineering lecture. It is a reminder that the most important moment happens quietly: when a cat climbs high, pauses, and decides the structure is worth trusting. For Globlazer, that trust is how a 70-inch cat tree becomes room furniture—not a pet accessory parked in the corner.
New Arrivals
Fresh designs, new colors, and limited releases for modern cat homes.
