Interior design VCB.

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Across
  1. 1. administration: Phase 5 of the interior design process. The design comes to life. Designer schedules and monitors construction work and costs.
  2. 3. development: Phase 3 of the interior design process. The refinement of designs and decisions the designer and client made. Phase of critical analysis, problem solving, and creativity. Phase includes floor plan revisions, evaluation of systems details, refinement of material and furnishings, development of interior architectural detailing, refinement of budget, and client sign-offs.
  3. 5. interior design: Involves the planning and design of private dwellings to reflect the client’s tastes, preferences, and functional needs.
  4. 6. A person who works for another to learn a trade.
  5. 8. Takes place before the interior design process begins. Designer interviews the client and asks questions to understand client’s needs. If the designer’s skills match and the client agrees a contract is signed so the interior design process can begin.
  6. 11. samples/artifacts: Photographs, floor-plan drawings, free-hand sketches, or conceptual models of work that you have done. Will be used in a portfolio to showcase your work to future clients.
  7. 13. shadowing: Spending time with a person at work and learning by watching as he or she performs the functions of the job.
  8. 14. An educational work experience for credit that allows the student to investigate different areas of the interior design field, learn the culture of various firms, and understand how academic preparation corresponds to the practice of design.
  9. 16. portfolio: A paper copy of a collection of work samples of a person’s best work, often used when applying for a job to show a person’s abilities and accomplishments.
  10. 18. design: The creation of interior environments that support the function, aesthetics, and cultures of those who inhabit, live, and thrive in interior spaces.
  11. 19. program: A document that outlines the client project-functions, specific need requirements in each space, issues, and current status. Becomes a checklist-type document that helps the designer understand the client’s situation and needs, and ensures inclusion of every requirement in the final design solution.
  12. 21. Pleasing in appearance without personal bias.
  13. 23. documents: Phase 4 of the interior design process. Involves preparing formal documents for the construction and installation of design. These documents are the legally binding document. Continue with refinement of budget, development of working drawings, specification book, bidding with contractor, and client approvals.
  14. 24. and post-occupancy: Phase 6 of the interior design process. Designers sets a move-in date and schedules furniture and equipment delivery. Designer needs to assess the client’s satisfaction.
Down
  1. 2. interior design: Involves the planning and design of primarily public spaces. Includes places where you eat, work, play, recover health and heal from medical conditions, exercise, meditate, or enjoy life.
  2. 4. uses schematics- quick drawings to help envision floor plants, spaces, and more. Includes concept development, preliminary space planning, drawings, furniture, fixtures, and equipment, and budget projection. By the end of this phase the designer will have explored multiple design solutions and will provide the client with enough information to be able to select a proposed solution.
  3. 7. Phase 1 of the interior design process. The designer clearly identifies the client’s design problem, current situation, and future needs. Involves fact-finding, client interviews, on-site analysis of the project and creation of the client program. By the end the designer should fully understand the needs of the project in detail and the client should verify accuracy before the designer proceeds to the next phase.
  4. 9. design process: A method that interior designers use for organizing their work, guiding their actions, and finalizing their decisions when working with team members and clients. Although the phases of the process are linear, it is not unusual for a designer to revisit them several times as a client changes his or her mind or a design is further refined.
  5. 10. design: Phase 2 of the interior design process. A brainstorming or “what-if” phase that is creative and innovative. The designer explores and generates multiple ideas and multiple-design solutions based on the client program.
  6. 12. A brief summary of a person’s education, skills, work experience, activities, and interests.
  7. 15. copy portfolio: A digital copy of a collection of work samples of a person’s best work, often used when applying for a job to show a person’s abilities and accomplishments.
  8. 17. of ethics: Guiding principles of conduct and character that are established by and within professional organizations. A combination of best practices in business with moral principles to guide the interior design professional in simple, personal or complex business relationships.
  9. 20. designer: A multi-faceted professional who uses creative and technical solutions applied within a structure to achieve a built interior environment.
  10. 22. learning: A method of learning that combines classroom instruction with meaningful community service.