Hemanth V

Interior Designers Kept Losing Clients Who Could Never See the Design

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We're Hemanth and Abhijeet, co-founders of VirtualSpaces. Neither of us came from interior design. We came from engineering. And when we started looking closely at how residential designers, architects, and property developers actually worked, one thing kept coming up: the visualization problem.

Designers would spend weeks producing concepts. Clients would spend weeks struggling to imagine them. The gap between a 2D floor plan and a finished space is just too wide for most people to bridge mentally. So projects stalled. Revisions piled up. And great design kept getting lost in translation.

We built Foursite to close that gap. Upload a 2D blueprint or architectural drawing. Get a photorealistic, spec-accurate 3D interior in minutes. No render studio. No outsourced team. No weeks of waiting. The designer stays in control from concept through client presentation.

We also built Remodroom for a slightly different problem: the renovation client who uploads a photo of their existing room and needs to see what it could become before committing to anything. Same idea. Show the space. Make the decision possible.

Here's what we've seen with designers using these tools in their actual workflow:

  • First presentations go from "I think I like it" to "yes, that's it", because the client can actually see the space

  • Revision rounds drop from 4-6 to 1-2, because alignment happens visually before anything gets specified

  • Outsourced render costs go to near zero

  • Projects close faster and refer more, because clients felt heard, not just delivered to

The deeper thing we believe is this: AI interior design visualization isn't a production shortcut. It's a design tool. The best designers are using AI 3D visualization not to save time at the end of the process, but to put the client's spatial experience at the center of the process from day one.

That's what we're building toward: a world where "I'll know it when I see it" is actually a useful starting point, not a frustrating one.

We'd love your support, your feedback, and your honest takes on where this workflow is still broken.

Read more: Designing Spaces for People

Cheers!

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