In your company, you have managers. When renovating your home, if you don’t have a single point of contact bridging design and construction, you become the “manager of problems.” Here is why it doesn’t pay off.
Imagine this scene at your company: there is a stoppage on the production line. The machinery supplier claims the workstation wasn’t ready. The logistics manager says no one provided the exact measurements. The IT technician claims the network ports are missing.
The result? The investment is stalled, and you lose money while trying to figure out who failed to communicate with whom.
In your business, you have structured processes to avoid this chaos. You have Project Managers. The question is: why, when investing thousands to redesign your home’s interiors, do you accept becoming the referee between the drywaller, the electrician, and the kitchen supplier?
The Illusion of Savings in Interior Coordination
Many clients think: “I’ll choose the floors, I’ll visit the furniture store, I’ll call the painter myself… that way I save on the designer or the coordinator fees.”
This is a miscalculation that—especially in interiors where details are everything—leads to two costly consequences:
- The Interface Error (Which You Pay For): Without a comprehensive technical vision, aesthetics clash with functionality. A classic example: your dream kitchen arrives, but the electrical sockets installed last week are located exactly behind the dishwasher or in the middle of a drawer unit.
- The “Blame Game”: The interior decorator will say the layout was correct. The electrician will say he followed the old tracks because no one told him otherwise. Who pays to break the wall open again and re-plaster, delaying the furniture installation? You do.
“DIY” management—between touch-ups, modifications, and materials ordered twice—often ends up costing 30% more than the budget, not to mention the stress.
My Unique Value Proposition: Centralized Direction
To prevent your home restyling from becoming a logistical nightmare, the approach must change. My role isn’t just selecting fabrics and colors. My role is to be your Single Technical and Aesthetic Point of Contact.
Here is what this means concretely:
- Harmony between Systems and Decor: I don’t just draw “where the sofa goes.” I design the space so that lights, sockets, and air conditioning flows are exactly where your furniture needs them, before the construction crew closes the walls.
- I Am Your Only Interface: You talk to me about your desires. I talk to the installers, carpenters, and technicians. I translate “I want a warm atmosphere” into precise color codes and lighting specifications (Kelvin and Lumens) for the electrician.
- I Solve Unforeseen Issues (Aesthetic and Practical): If a material is out of stock or a site measurement varies by a centimeter, I intervene by redesigning the solution immediately. I don’t call to tell you “it doesn’t fit”; I call to tell you “we adapted the design like this, and it looks perfect.”
True Luxury Today? Certainty of the Result
We are used to thinking of luxury in interior design as a famous brand or an exotic material. But true luxury is seeing your home transform without having to argue with anyone. It is walking in when the work is done and seeing that the light switch is perfectly aligned with the headboard, and the flooring flows uninterrupted from one room to another.
Luxury is knowing that a professional has taken care of every millimeter for you.
If you are looking for a partner who protects your taste and your peace of mind, transforming your interiors with a rigorous overall vision, my door is open.
Want to renovate your space without errors? Let’s talk. I will analyze the potential of your interiors to give you a home that functions as beautifully as it looks.
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