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AI-generated mediterranean office redesign from a single photo
How to get Mediterranean Office designs
1. Upload your photo
Take a photo of your room in good daylight and upload it directly from your phone or computer. No account required to try.
2. Select style and room type
Choose your design theme and confirm the room type. Add any specific details or requirements in the optional text field.
3. Download your designs
The AI generates your redesigned room in 30 to 60 seconds. Review the result, and download or share as needed.
Mediterranean design principles
Mediterranean interior design draws from the architecture and material culture of southern Europe — terracotta tiles, whitewashed walls, wrought iron, handmade ceramics, and the warm, vivid colour palette of Spain, Italy, and Greece. The style is most successful when it prioritises texture, craft, and the interaction of light with tactile surfaces rather than simply applying colour.
Build around terracotta, stone, and ceramic tile
Mediterranean architecture is almost inseparable from terracotta tile floors, stone walls, and handmade ceramic surfaces. These materials regulate temperature, age beautifully, and carry a visual warmth that painted surfaces cannot replicate. If structural tile is not possible, introducing terracotta pots, hand-painted ceramic tiles as a splashback, or stone as a worktop surface achieves a material connection to the style that reads authentically.
Use white as the base and saturated accents deliberately
The most enduring Mediterranean interiors use white or off-white generously on walls and ceilings, then introduce saturated colour in specific places — a set of blue-painted shutters, a terracotta-tiled floor, a vivid mosaic panel. This contrast between the bright white base and the warm, intense accents is what gives the style its characteristic sense of light and liveliness. Applying saturated colour everywhere sacrifices this dynamic.
Incorporate handcraft and artisan objects
Mediterranean design is grounded in artisan production — hand-thrown pottery, hand-woven textiles, hand-forged ironwork. Introducing these objects connects a room to the design tradition more effectively than any paint colour. Look for ceramic table lamps, wrought iron candle holders, hand-painted tiles, and woven kilim rugs in natural dyes. The slight irregularity of handmade objects is a feature, not a defect.
Frame outdoor connections wherever possible
Mediterranean houses are designed around outdoor living, and the best interiors in this style acknowledge that relationship. If you have access to a garden, terrace, or even a small balcony, use the window as a deliberate frame — sheer curtains that move in outdoor air, furniture positioned to look toward greenery, and materials that transition gracefully between inside and outside spaces.
Office design considerations
A home office must deliver sustained functional performance — adequate light, ergonomic comfort, acoustic privacy, and effective storage — while fitting within a domestic environment that usually has competing demands on the same space.
Ergonomics before aesthetics
The desk height, chair adjustability, monitor position, and lighting quality in a home office have direct effects on physical health and cognitive performance across a working day. A visually beautiful office that requires a compromised posture or creates eyestrain will affect both wellbeing and productivity. Solve ergonomics first, then design around the correct setup.
Separation from domestic life
Working from home requires some degree of psychological separation between work mode and home mode, even when the physical space is shared. A defined desk position that can be left at the end of the day, a door that closes, or even a screen or curtain that covers work equipment when not in use all help create that boundary in ways that improve work quality and rest quality.
Cable management from the start
Power, monitor cables, network cables, and device charging cables in an unmanaged home office create both visual clutter and practical inconvenience. Planning cable routing before furniture is positioned — including desk grommets, in-desk power units, cable trays, and wall channels — is far more effective than retrofitting solutions around an existing setup.