Group charges interior designers to embrace AI, emotive design

9 hours ago 4

BY MOTOLANI OSENI

The Interior Designers Association of Nigeria (IDAN) has advised interior designers in Nigeria who are willing to advance in the profession to embrace emotive design, lived experience and artificial intelligence (AI).

The resident of IDAN, Ms. Jacqueline Aki stated this during the IDAN celebration of the 2025 World Interiors Day, themed ‘Designing with Emotion; Building with Intelligence,’ in Ikoyi, Lagos, recently.

In her opening remark, she urged interior designers to lean into three powerful intersections, which are: “Emotive design—the ability to create spaces that connect deeply with human emotion. Not just beautiful spaces, but healing. Liberating and Uplifting spaces. Designers must have lived experience, which is understanding how design is received, inhabited, and remembered. How does a space feel at 8 a.m. versus 8 p.m.? How it supports joy, inclusion, dignity.”

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According to him, “AI is not a replacement for creativity, but as a collaborator and aggregator. A tool to extend our thinking, not override it. The challenge before us is to integrate intelligence—human and machine—with emotional and ethical clarity. To ensure that technology serves human-centred design, not the other way around.”

Ms. Aki said, “Today is more than a date on the calendar. It is a global affirmation of the value of our work— the unseen hands, the thinking minds, the empathetic hearts behind the spaces where people live, heal, gather, and grow.

“Our theme this year, ‘Designing with Emotion; Building with Intelligence,” could not be more timely. It asks us to consider not only what we design, but how and why. It challenges us to create with empathy, to build with insight, and to lead with the awareness that our work has consequences—social, cultural, psychological, and environmental.”

‘At IDAN, we believe deeply in this responsibility. We believe that design at its core is a necessity. It is not decoration—it is strategy, it is wellbeing, it is nation-building,’ she added.

She stated that these intersections are not abstract. They are here. And they require every one of us to listen better, share more, and co-create boldly.

Speaking on the theme, Assistant Secretary General of IDAN, Dr. Omeba Ejiogu, said: “We adapted this theme to make it feel more relatable to our audience here in Nigeria. The idea is simple: design isn’t just about how things look—it’s about how they make people feel and how well they function. Right now, it’s so important that our spaces do both—comfort people emotionally and work smartly in today’s world. That’s really what inspired us.”

On how IDAN is helping designers grow in Nigeria, she said, “At IDAN, we’re all about building well-rounded designers. We want our members to have strong technical skills, but we also want them to design with empathy.

“That is why we organise training, mentorships, and real-life projects—like our redesign of the LUTH Sickle Cell Ward. That project shows how design can make a space not just functional, but healing and human. Its how we’re helping our designers make a real impact,” she added.

Speaking on the future of the industry in Africa, Mrs. Ejiogu said: “I am so excited about the future. Africa is full of stories, materials, and ideas that the world needs to see more of. I hope that we keep building a design identity that’s proudly Afrocentric—authentic, bold, and innovative. I’d also love to see more African designers involved in bigger conversations—urban planning, education, healthcare—because we belong at every table where spaces are being shaped.”

She called on all designers across the world to keep innovating and advancing their crafts, “To every designer out there: keep doing what you do with passion and purpose. Whether you’re designing a luxury home, a small office, or a hospital room, know that your work matters. You have the power to shape how people live, feel, and connect. Be bold, be thoughtful, and above all, design with heart,” she added.

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