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 Professional Interior Designer Vs Non professional

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TSbearpi728
post May 8 2023, 09:50 PM, updated 3y ago

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Since when interior design became a professional service and have professional body? What is the difference? Would I get prosecuted by being unlicensed?
DragonReine
post May 9 2023, 07:39 AM

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1) Blame the rampant number of scammers and just straight up incompetent people dragging down the industry to the point that need something to set standards and code of ethics.

2) it's nothing new? The LAM has been around for some time:

https://www.lam.gov.my/registration-require...erior-designers

3) Unlicensed interior designers providing interior design services can be charged as impersonating or misrepresentation under the Architect Act 1967 (amendments Feb 2015) - Act 117, Section 33 Sub–section (e).

If found guilty of an offence, they will be liable to a fine not exceeding RM50,000 or imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years or to both.
TSbearpi728
post May 10 2023, 08:43 PM

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Thanks for replying,

At one hand I feel like it is good to set up standards but on the other hand I feel like is weird that they call it a professional service when it is just design. It feels like giving Ts. title to fine art artists and call them "professionals" which is a thing now.

Interior design should be something intangible and subjective to eye. Clearly interior design feels different from other traditional professionals like architect, engineers, doctors, lawyers and accountants.

I just feel like there should be a better way in solving this instead of doing an ultimate move and split between registered and non registered. This ultimate move would just make registered interior designers having the benefit of doing middle person endorsement and taking all the credits like what architects do.
Aaron212
post May 10 2023, 08:45 PM

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It started when ID cost more than the materials costs combined

Learn ID thru youtube better hahaha
DragonReine
post May 11 2023, 08:18 AM

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QUOTE(bearpi728 @ May 10 2023, 08:43 PM)
Thanks for replying,

At one hand I feel like it is good to set up standards but on the other hand I feel like is weird that they call it a professional service when it is just design. It feels like giving Ts. title to fine art artists and call them "professionals" which is a thing now.

Interior design should be something intangible and subjective to eye. Clearly interior design feels different from other traditional professionals like architect, engineers, doctors, lawyers and accountants.

I just feel like there should be a better way in solving this instead of doing an ultimate move and split between registered and non registered. This ultimate move would just make registered interior designers having the benefit of doing middle person endorsement and taking all the credits like what architects do.
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That's not a good comparison, because a fine artist only creates a work of art that is then consumed/kept by the client.

In contrast, an interior designer in Malaysia is (usually) not just responsible for designing the interior of a home that people will live in for years, interior designers in Malaysia often take on project management roles, selecting materials and supervising contractors to build the interior, making structural changes to the home, changing the wiring, changing the piping etc.

When THAT happens, involving issues of safety and longevity (of product), the license is needed to ensure that a code of ethics is enforced and regulated, to minimize the likelihood of unscrupulous people who give designs that look pretty on paper but isn't liveable and/or hire and use subpar contractors and materials. Obviously it doesn't prevent all of that, but if it reduces the lazy crooks it at least makes it easier to find and limit the stubborn crooks.

Trying to compare fine artists to interior design (in the context of Malaysian industry) is about as logical as comparing an illustrator to a graphic designer. It really isn't the same in both required skillset and in practical application of said skillset.

This post has been edited by DragonReine: May 11 2023, 10:40 AM

 

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