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Interior Design Trends For The Future: Plants And Greenery and It's Effect on Consumers

Interior Design Trends For The Future: Plants And Greenery and It's Effect on Consumers

Table of Contents

What is Biophilic Design?

Biophilic Design is a way of celebrating human’s connection to nature by incorporating elements into a structures design which celebrate natural elements such as plants and animals, while incorporating decor which mimics the shapes, patterns, and light of the environment. The goal of such styling is to create an organized space which helps fulfill the human need to connect with the natural world beyond the urbanscapes we have created and exist within in the modern era.

Why is this beneficial for businesses?

Biophilic design serves humans well in every space, allowing them to get in touch with their more primal state and balance themselves within the mindset we evolved to have in the time before cities developed in the Industrial Era. This results in stress reduction and increased productivity. For this reason, many companies across the globe are incorporating green into their work places. Here's 10 companies implementing biophilic design.

Furthermore, in retail locations, biophilic design helps to move beyond the concept of “malls” as they are known today, and begin converting them into the “lifestyle centers” designers and architects are conceptualizing today. Lifestyle centers incorporate natural features, such as fountains and greenery, and entertainment elements, such as restaurants and theaters, along with storefronts. This allows customers to browse without experiencing the boredom they often experience in modern malls. Going forward, designers will work to create more open-air shopping centers, leaving behind the more characterless malls of the past, which foster dispassionate shopping experiences for consumers who inevitably seek to fulfill only their most basic and immediate needs.

Does Biophilic Design affect consumers the same way it may affect employees and workers?

biophillic design incorporated into an office

Employees are also happier in environments where biophilic design is present. Workers spend more time in the business than consumers, so the incorporation of natural design will have the largest impact on their productivity and positive outlook. During their time in stores, consumers are able to feel more connected to the space, as well as the products for which they shop. Shoppers with less fatigue and mood and boosted moods are more capable of communicating and fostering a relationship with retail workers who are tasked with assisting them.

How to incorporate Biophilic Design?

highland track light system supporting biophillic design

Obviously, it is not feasible to turn every shopping mall into an open air-lifestyle center; however, business owners can start small by introducing greenery, such as living walls, as an artistic design element into their shop. Other small changes can be made to embrace the natural, such as an adjustment to improve natural light (or adding lights which mimic the sun), incorporation of stone or wood to the setup, or adding a water feature with fish living in it.

Incorporate nature, never intimidate it. Fake plants feel tacky and are bad for the environment, as well as the air quality of your store as they collect dust. Fluorescent lights can cause migraines and diminish productivity. Harness the pleasant, natural light of LEDs, a much more accommodating light source, and embrace Soltech grow lights as your answer for healthy foliage year round. Consider when you feel happiest and most connected to nature, and what you think your customers will respond best to.

he key to a thriving summer plant collection is simple: match each plant to the right amount of light, water based on how dry the soil is rather than a fixed schedule, and shield sensitive leaves from harsh midday sun. This guide covers which plants love the season, how to water and light them as temperatures rise, how to prevent leaf scorch, and when it makes sense to move plants outdoors.

Good indoor plant design comes down to a few repeatable principles: match each plant to its light, vary height and scale, group in odd numbers, and give every arrangement one clear focal point. This guide breaks those principles down, walks through plant placement room by room, and covers what to do when your best-looking spot does not get enough light.

You've got a pothos on the windowsill. Maybe a snake plant in the corner. And somewhere along the way, you started wondering if there's more to it than that.

There is.

The apartments that feel truly alive, the ones you scroll past on Pinterest and instantly want to live in, aren't just homes with a few plants in predictable spots. They're intentional. A trailing vine above the kitchen cabinets. A lush fern tucked into the bathroom. A sculptural snake plant in the entryway that makes you feel like you've arrived somewhere good.

A lot of those looks are more achievable than they seem. And with the right plant, and sometimes a little help from a grow light, even the darker, more forgotten corners of your apartment can become something worth noticing.

Here are five unexpected places to bring your plant styling ideas to life.