Interiors | Designing for Flow, Not Just Finish
- Beniamin Mascovici

- Aug 29
- 2 min read

At ABM, we believe that architecture doesn’t stop at the walls.
It continues inward—into the spaces people actually live, work, and move through. That’s where interior architecture begins. And it’s where flow matters most.
For us, interiors are not surface decisions. They are spatial systems. They shape how people feel in a space, how they move through it, how they use it intuitively. Interior design is not something we apply—it’s something we build into the DNA of the project from the very start.
Designing the In-Between
We often describe interiors as “the architecture of the in-between.” The in-between walls. The in-between programs. The in-between moments—when someone pauses in a corridor, meets in a nook, glances toward a window. These moments aren’t minor. They’re where experience happens.
That’s why we don’t separate interior design from the architecture. We see it as part of the same conversation—form, rhythm, light, material, and movement. When those elements work in harmony, the space just makes sense.
You feel it.
You don’t need to be told how to use it.
It guides you without instruction.
Material, Light, and Atmosphere
Interior spaces are tactile. People touch them. Hear them. Walk across them every day. So we design them for experience, not just appearance.
We think in transitions:
Matte to gloss. Warm to cool. Soft to structured.
And we consider how light interacts with every surface throughout the day—not just at noon on photo day.
Materiality, when done well, tells a quiet story. It reinforces the architecture. It gives the space personality, but never steals focus.

Comfort is Not an Accessory
For us, comfort is not a style it’s a designed condition. It’s in the ceiling height, the acoustic dampening, the temperature control, the way furniture integrates with built-in elements. It’s in how far you walk to find what you need. Or how little you need to think about it at all.
When interiors are designed with comfort in mind, people stay longer, focus better, move more easily. That’s when you know the architecture is working even if they don’t consciously notice it.
From Finish to Framework
Whether it’s a residence, a workplace, or a public space, we bring the same rigor to our interior design process as we do to the structure itself. Every element has a reason. Every zone supports function. Every finish serves the whole.
We don’t design finishes.
We design flow.
Want to Create Interiors That Work Harder?
Let’s talk about how architecture and interior space can speak the same language form, material, and motion, all in sync.


