Bringing interior architecture into an architectural practice isn’t just a convenience—it’s a game-changer. When the exterior and interior are designed as one, spaces feel more intentional, more fluid, and ultimately, more alive. It’s about crafting experiences, not just structures.

For clients, this means a smoother, more immersive process. Instead of juggling between architectural designers and interior designers, they get a unified vision from day one. Materials, lighting, textures, and spatial flow are all considered holistically, ensuring the final space isn’t just functional, but deeply engaging. It’s the difference between a house and a home, a structure and a story. Nicola Liew, Interior Architect at ata, says "It's a success to me at the end of a project when I see the spaces we created being enjoyed and lived in the way we saw them."

Design

For projects, the benefits are even more profound. Design integrity is preserved, transitions between architecture and interiors are seamless, and spaces breathe with purpose. Every surface, every volume, every light-filled corridor is intentional, reinforcing the soul of the architecture rather than competing with it. This integrated approach also minimizes costly design misalignments and ensures that form and function evolve together. At its core, integrating interior architecture means creating spaces that don’t just work—they inspire. At ata we design not just for aesthetics, but for emotion, experience, and the way people truly live, work, and interact with their surroundings.

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Architecture
Interiors
Design