
Binghatti
Senior Interior Designer – Full-Time
Software: 3ds Max, Corona Renderer (so yeah, you gotta be a 3D wiz)
Alright, here’s the deal: Binghatti wants a Senior Interior Designer. Not just anybody—someone who actually gets jazzed about making spaces look amazing, not just slapping a “modern” couch in the corner and calling it a day. If you live and breathe killer 3D visuals, and you’re ready to boss up on both residential and commercial projects, keep reading.
What you’ll actually do (besides drink coffee and panic over deadlines):
– Take charge of interior design projects—start to finish. You’ll be the go-to, not the errand-runner.
– Whip up mood boards, concept designs, layouts, and pick every single chair, lamp, and rug (yes, even the ugly ones).
– Own the 3D side: model and render like a pro in 3ds Max and Corona Renderer. If your renders look like something from The Sims, maybe sit this one out.
– Team up with architects, project managers, and the occasional “I want it to feel more… blue” client. Communication skills are kinda essential.
– Make sure your 3D visuals are so realistic that someone might try to sit on a digital sofa.
– Play with materials, lighting, colors—basically, make stuff look dope in both real life and on screen.
– Handle presentations, tender docs, construction details. All the “grown-up” paperwork, basically.
You should have:
– A bachelor’s in Interior Design, Architecture, or something in that ballpark.
– At least 5 years actually doing the work (not just pinning pretty rooms on Pinterest).
– A portfolio packed with 3D goodness—show us what you’ve got.
– Serious chops in 3ds Max, Corona Renderer, and Adobe Creative Suite (Photoshop, InDesign—that kind of thing).
– Ability to run projects like a boss, from wild idea to grand reveal.
– Know your FF&E specs, materials, and color theory. If you think “FF&E” is a typo, Google it first.
– AutoCAD skills. SketchUp or Revit? Cool bonus points.