Sydney interior architecture, hospitality refurbishment, residential decoration and design strategy

About the studio

A multidisciplinary design studio for interiors that need to feel resolved, not merely styled.

In Design International is built around a practical belief: beauty lasts longer when it is supported by good planning, clear priorities and disciplined execution.

Founded in 2010

Experience-led interiors for homes, hotels and commercial environments.

The studio brings together interior architecture, decoration, furniture thinking, material selection and hospitality awareness. The work is intentionally client-facing: spaces must photograph well, but more importantly they must welcome people, guide behaviour, hold up to use and support the owner’s commercial or personal goals.

Clients often arrive with fragments: a floor plan, a tired hotel, a new-build shell, a residence that feels impressive but not comfortable, or a workplace that no longer reflects the organisation. The studio turns those fragments into a coherent direction.

Modern commercial facade with vertical rhythm

Principles

How the studio thinks.

Plan first

Function, flow, adjacencies and service requirements are resolved before aesthetic decisions become fixed.

Design for memory

Guests and residents remember sequence, light, texture, comfort and small moments of care.

Respect operations

Commercial spaces must work for cleaners, staff, maintenance teams, suppliers and customers.

Design with restraint

Not every surface needs to shout. Strong interiors usually rely on hierarchy, proportion and material discipline.

Who the studio is best suited to

In Design International is best suited to clients who want considered guidance rather than a catalogue of disconnected selections. That includes owners planning premium residential interiors, hotel operators wanting to lift guest experience, developers seeking a stronger presentation layer, and business owners who need their physical environment to communicate trust.

A successful interior should answer three questions at once: what is the space for, how should people feel inside it, and how will it keep working after handover?