Roles Played by a Commercial Interior Designer

The rise of real estate has given us ample of commercial as well as residential places. Commercial places are meant purely for business, and their interiors should be such that they are both appealing as well as ergonomic. Unlike the interior designs meant for homes, commercial interior designs have a unique theme that pairs up with the commercial use of the space. And to design the interiors as per the likes of the modern world and the employee class, we have a commercial interior designer.

A commercial interior designer is the one who creates and directs the plan of construction or renovation of a business place such as an office. He is the one who is responsible to craft the blue prints of designs, selection of materials, planning of layouts, distribution of space in the facility, arrangement of walls in the interior spaces, and co-ordination with the construction and design team that works on the field.

The designer is the mastermind behind planning and decoration of office and business spaces, and he is endowed with architectural knowledge that helps him create proper functional areas with adequate space distribution as per the area of work. Thus, we can rightly say that the commercial interior designer is a lot more than just the one who designs, but someone who rightly looks after how the office or business space shapes up.

A commercial interior designer plays several roles than just the designing part. Here are a few responsibilities entrusted upon him.

  1. Creation of Interior Design Plan

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We know that the office space cannot be designed without having a proper plan in place. For that, the designer co-ordinates with the stakeholders to narrow down on a particular theme. This is largely done by going through an existing catalogue of ideas, or creation of fresh designs. Only when the theme is fixed that the designer goes ahead with creation of the plan for office space. This includes the office layout, construction modifications, furniture prototype designs, wall designs, and a lot more; all of which comprise an interior design plan.

2. Selection of materials, items

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All items required for construction of interior walls, office units, interior spaces, and display items need to be sourced by the designer himself. He looks after the trademark of quality and is responsible for all the materials required.

3. Co-ordination with vendors

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Be it for sourcing materials, arrangement of tools, creation of art works, or simply procurement of pieces, the designer is one single point of contact among the vendors and the construction site.

4. Monitoring

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The designer has to monitor the progress of the work in order to check whether the design is shaping up as per the blue prints.