AI transforming how we design
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is becoming an increasingly common topic across industries — and interior design is no exception. It’s not just a trendy buzzword anymore; AI is transforming how designers create, visualize, and present their ideas.
The Design Your Glitch report highlights a major shift: AI is moving from being a supporting tool to becoming part of the creative process itself. In many ways, it’s becoming a co-author — generating inspiration, testing design variations, and speeding up tasks that once took hours.
So the real question isn’t “Will AI replace designers?” but rather, “How will AI change the way designers work?”
AI as a Source of Inspiration
The early stages of design are often time-consuming. Gathering references, creating mood boards, and combining materials can take hours. According to the report, AI can significantly accelerate this process. With just a few keywords or a reference image, you can generate visual variations in minutes — concepts that might otherwise take days to develop.
But AI isn’t a designer. Think of it as a sketch assistant. It offers you quick ideas that you can then refine and adapt based on your taste, experience, and understanding of the client.
💡 Tip: Use AI to test contrasting design approaches. Generate minimalist, bold, and decorative versions — and observe which one resonates most with your client.

AI in Visualizations
Clients today expect highly realistic visualizations — more than ever before. The report emphasizes that visual persuasiveness is just as important as the design itself. And this is where AI has a major impact.
AI tools can fine-tune lighting, generate textures, or show a space in various moods — all within minutes. This means you can present multiple design options without spending days on detailed 3D modeling.
However, AI still has its limits. Some outputs may look stunning but aren’t technically feasible. The designer’s role is to distinguish what’s possible from what’s merely a beautiful image.
💡Tip: Treat AI visualizations as a starting point for discussion, not a final product. Clients need to see the space, but real design must be grounded in verified technical details. Tools like Muse AI are designed for exactly that — use it to create quick room visualizations from your product list and explore several variations in seconds.

Source: Muse AI by Densy
Collaboration, Not Competition
One of the biggest fears among designers is being replaced by AI. After all, AI can generate images, suggest material combinations, and even design entire interiors — so does that mean designers are obsolete? Absolutely not.
Clients aren’t just looking for visually interesting interiors. They want a partner who understands their lifestyle, budget, and expectations — someone who can guide them through the entire process from start to finish.
AI can help co-create visualizations, but it can’t replace listening, advising, or managing a project. The future isn’t about “AI instead of designers,” but “designers who know how to use AI intelligently.”
💡Tip: Don’t hesitate to show clients that you use AI. Many see it as a sign of professionalism and a modern approach. Just emphasize that AI supports your work — it doesn’t replace it.
Digital Habits as the Foundation for AI
AI is powerful, but it’s not magic. The report clearly shows that without organized workflows, AI won’t bring real efficiency.
If your projects are scattered across emails, paper notes, and shared folders, no AI will fix that. True efficiency comes only when your projects are structured, processes are clear, and information is easily accessible. Only then can AI fulfill its role — accelerating workflows, improving visualization, and supporting the creative process.
💡Tip: Before integrating AI into your work, evaluate how you manage your projects. If your processes are chaotic, AI will only accelerate the chaos — not solve it.
Conclusion: AI as Your Creative Partner
Artificial Intelligence brings speed, flexibility, and room for experimentation to interior design. It helps generate ideas, enhances visualizations, and saves valuable time. But it doesn’t replace what matters most — understanding the client and executing the project to completion.
Think of AI as your creative partner — a tool that inspires and accelerates, while you remain the visionary. Designers who embrace AI won’t lose their role. On the contrary — they’ll gain a competitive edge in an industry that’s rapidly becoming digital.



