INTERIOR SPACES: Designs for Living EnvironmentsOur team combines the principles of space, structure, planning, and detailing channeled through collaboration, logic, strategic thinking, and creativity to craft tailor-made quality working and living environments. All Amenity Interiors Branded Environments Civic Interiors Corporate Commercial Corporate Interiors Education Interiors High Rise High Tech Commercial Hospitality Interiors Restaurant Restaurant Interiors Retail Interiors Worship Interiors 300 South Tryon Fitness I Interiors 300 South Tryon Lobby I Interiors 583 King Street I Interiors Albemarle Headquarters I Interiors Ally Charlotte Center Aloft Charleston Crosstown Three Graces Bar Apiture Upfit I Interiors AvidXchange Corporate Headquarters I Interiors Bitty & Beau’s Coffee Savannah I Interiors Bluffton Town Hall I Interiors BoomTown! I Interiors Broadstone Queen City Capitol Towers Amenity Spaces I Interiors CCIT at One Research Drive I Interiors Charleston Metro Chamber of Commerce Interiors CompuCom I Interiors Confidential Law Firm Upfit Del Webb North Myrtle Amenity Center Diocese of Charleston I Interiors Fuquay-Varina Community Library I Interiors Hoffler Place Interiors IKA Works Renovation/Expansion I Interiors Ingevity Headquarters Interiors Jackson Creek Elementary School I Interiors JTEKT North American Headquarters I Interiors Kiawah Island Municipal Complex I Interiors LeCreuset Boutique I Interiors Legacy Union 1 I Interiors LS3P Asheville Office Upfit LS3P Wilmington Office Upfit I Interiors MegaCorp Logistics I Interiors Monteith Construction I Interiors Nelson Mullins Law Firm (Boston) I Interiors Nelson Mullins Los Angeles I Interiors Polaris Tech Charter School I Interiors RESA Phase II I Interiors Richland Two Institute of Innovation I Interiors Riverdog’s Stadium Riley Park Club I Interiors SAS Building A I Interiors SkyGarden I Interiors Sonepar I Interiors TEN30 Corporate Campus Interiors The Inn at Elon University I Interiors The Vendue I Interiors Trident Technical College SC Aeronautical Training Center I Interiors Two Keys Public House I Interiors University of South Carolina Alumni Center I Interiors Wando Mount Pleasant Library I Interiors FORESIGHTS The Town Hall as the New Collaborative Hub The newIn this era of record levels of workforce mobility, manyAfter living with the threat of COVID-19 for several months, it is increasingly clear that we will need to manage this situation for some time to come. Habits and lifestyle changes adopted as pandemic strategies may prove enduring, and these changes will be reflected in our designs in both the short-term and long-term. Multifamily developments pose unique challenges and opportunities. Designers must consider how people use private residential spaces as well as public shared spaces. In both settings, design and operational strategies can support healthier, more comfortable lifestyles as needs evolve. We want to create spaces where children want to be. In the spaces we experience, few design elements are as high-impact and low-cost as color. A well-chosen color scheme can improve safety, support mental focus, protect vision, elevate mood, assist with wayfinding, promote kindness, encourage active learning, reinforce branding, and create a welcoming learning environment for all. Which colors work, and which colors don’t? There is no one-size-fits-all solution to color selection in the school environment. Although the full impact of the COVID-19 pandemic will not be understood for some time, the workplace as we know it will certainly change. We must strategize new ways to learn and grow from what we are experiencing in order to make the workplace as safe and healthy as possible for all. Lighting is more than just illumination; it also sets the tone, influences our moods, and enhances our emotions. Simply stated: lighting inspires. We have come to expect beautiful lighting in restaurant, theaters, and other welcoming and creative environments. We also expect that the design of fixtures and their layout within a space provides adequate illumination for each task at hand. Building codes typically regulate metrics such as foot-candle levels and energy usage, but seldom address other aspects of lighting design. Explore More Foresights