The Story Behind Anita de Villiers Interior Design: Creating Layered and Timeless Spaces 30th March 2026 | IN DESIGN ADVICE | BY SBID

Anita de Villiers, Principal Interior Designer at Anita de Villiers Interior Design, has given her insights into the industry.

My route into interior design was not a straight one and I think that has shaped how I work. I began my career in South Africa with a BSc degree in Mathematics and Computer Science, followed by several years in the Information Technology sector. That background gave me a strong foundation in conceptualisation, project management and working closely with clients, skills I rely on every day as a designer.

My interest in interiors started as a serious hobby: I designed, built and furnished a few luxury homes and found that I enjoyed the technical and creative demands of the process. I made the shift to full-time interior design when I relocated to Cyprus in 2012, where I formalised my qualification and ran a successful studio for six years. Every project came through referral and covered high-end residential properties alongside some commercial commissions.

In August 2018, I settled in Surrey with my family and have since worked across a wide range of residential projects in the area: from full home renovations in the Surrey Hills to grand master bathrooms on Wentworth Estate. I now run a boutique interior design practice based in Reigate, specialising in creating refined yet practical home interiors across Surrey and the South East of England. My approach is deeply personal and collaborative: I manage every stage of the design journey myself, from the initial site survey through to the final specification.

Anita de Villiers, The Story Behind Anita de Villiers Interior Design: Creating Layered and Timeless Spaces
Anita de Villiers Interior Design
Anita de Villiers, The Story Behind Anita de Villiers Interior Design: Creating Layered and Timeless Spaces
Anita de Villiers Interior Design

Why did you want to work in the interior design profession?

Growing up in South Africa, many homes were designed around large, open-plan spaces, natural light and raw, organic textures that flowed out into generous gardens. Beautiful spaces were simply part of the culture and outdoor living was part of everyday life. I was always drawn to art and collecting interesting pieces and putting a room together came naturally to me long before I understood the principles behind why it worked.

Travelling to more exotic destinations and staying in boutique hotels has always been a source of inspiration and still is.

It was building speculative homes in South Africa that made me decide to shift my career to interior design. I realised I could combine the technical and organisational skills I had developed in my IT career with a creative discipline that felt genuinely rewarding.

Anita de Villiers, The Story Behind Anita de Villiers Interior Design: Creating Layered and Timeless Spaces
Anita de Villiers Interior Design

Which elements of your profession do you enjoy the most?

Each project becomes very personal as I work through the design process. My approach is highly visual: I build up a fully realised design on paper before anything is touched on site. Seeing a client’s reaction when they can clearly visualise their home is a real highlight for me.

I also enjoy the technical side, particularly designing bathrooms and bespoke joinery. These are demanding spaces where every millimetre counts and I find real satisfaction in solving the spatial challenges first: finding a layout that flows, then layering in the materials, lighting and finishes to make the room work beautifully on every level.

Working directly with each client from start to finish means I know the brief inside out and I can make decisions on their behalf with confidence. That level of personal involvement is something I value enormously and I think it shows in the result.

Anita de Villiers, The Story Behind Anita de Villiers Interior Design: Creating Layered and Timeless Spaces
Anita de Villiers, The Story Behind Anita de Villiers Interior Design: Creating Layered and Timeless Spaces
Anita de Villiers Interior Design

What has been your most memorable career highlight from the past year?

The Reigate Elegant Living Room project is a genuine highlight from the past year. What made it particularly satisfying was seeing how much could be achieved through considered design and a well-managed budget. The room was completely transformed from an underused, disconnected space into a luxurious and elegant living room that the family now uses and loves.

The transformation was achieved through carefully chosen elements: bespoke furniture pieces designed specifically for the proportions of the room, a layered lighting plan with dramatic statement pieces and a palette of luxurious materials and finishes. Together, these gave the space a real sense of depth and warmth. Every decision was deliberate and the result was a room that felt both impressive and genuinely liveable.

The project was subsequently featured on Pure White Lines and on SBID, where it was highlighted as an example of creating luxury living through lighting design. The client described the process as a pleasure from start to finish. That combination of a satisfied client and industry recognition made it a genuinely memorable project.

Anita de Villiers, The Story Behind Anita de Villiers Interior Design: Creating Layered and Timeless Spaces
Anita de Villiers Interior Design

What are your favourite types of projects to work on and why?

Bespoke bathroom design is where I feel most in my element. Over my career I have designed hundreds of bathrooms and the technical demands of the discipline remain as engaging as ever. Every millimetre is considered and accounted for: the layout, the plumbing positions, the lighting layers, the material choices, the joinery. To me, a well-designed bathroom feels like a jewellery box: compact, considered and beautiful in every detail. Technical precision and good design go hand in hand in these spaces.

Open-plan living areas are another favourite challenge. Kitchen, dining and lounge spaces that flow into one another need to work hard: each zone has its own function and feel, yet everything must connect cohesively. Getting those busy family spaces to feel right, both practically and visually, is something I find enormously satisfying.

New builds offer a different kind of reward. Working alongside architects and builders from the beginning means I can influence decisions around flow, electrical planning and surface materials before anything is fixed in place. That level of involvement from the outset produces a far more considered and cohesive result.

Working on period properties in Surrey is also particularly rewarding. The character is already there in the architecture and my role is to work with it, not against it.

Anita de Villiers, The Story Behind Anita de Villiers Interior Design: Creating Layered and Timeless Spaces
Anita de Villiers Interior Design
Anita de Villiers, The Story Behind Anita de Villiers Interior Design: Creating Layered and Timeless Spaces
Anita de Villiers Interior Design

What are the most challenging aspects of working in interior design?

One thing that surprises many clients is how long the design process takes. Thorough design cannot be rushed: sourcing the right products alone is enormously time-consuming and the responsibility that comes with those decisions is significant. Every specification must be right: the right material, the right finish, the right supplier, at the right price point.

I invest heavily in accurate 3D visuals and detailed technical design packs for this reason. Visuals give clients clarity and confidence to approve the design with conviction, while precise technical drawings remove ambiguity for contractors and ensure the design is executed exactly as intended. Both are essential tools for reducing risk on site.

The most challenging aspect for me personally is managing the commercial side of a project: procurement, budget control, project timelines and making sure the client’s investment is well protected throughout. These are not the visible or glamorous parts of interior design, but they are what separates a well-run project from a stressful one. Getting those elements right is just as important as the design itself.

Anita de Villiers, The Story Behind Anita de Villiers Interior Design: Creating Layered and Timeless Spaces
Anita de Villiers Interior Design

What do you wish you knew before working in the field?

Project management and clear communication with clients, contractors and suppliers are skills I understood to be important early on. What I did not fully appreciate was how much time and effort goes into marketing a design practice and how central it becomes to building a sustainable business.

When you are deeply involved in delivering projects, marketing is very easily neglected. Yet it is what keeps the pipeline moving. Professional photography matters more than most new designers realise: if your work is not documented well, it simply does not exist online. The same applies to video. Capturing project progress gives potential clients a much clearer picture of what working with you looks like and that is valuable.

The honest reality is that running a design practice means wearing many hats. The design work is only part of it and the sooner you invest in presenting that work properly, the better.

Anita de Villiers, The Story Behind Anita de Villiers Interior Design: Creating Layered and Timeless Spaces
Anita de Villiers Interior Design

If you could give one tip to aspiring designers, what would it be?

Spend time working within an established design studio before setting out on your own. The skills and knowledge gained from being part of a design team, working on real projects with real clients, budgets and deadlines, are invaluable. No course fully prepares you for the pace and complexity of live projects. Hands-on experience builds a foundation that is very difficult to replicate any other way.

Beyond that, get the layout right before you think about anything else. Colour, materials and furnishings are all decisions that can be revisited; an incorrectly planned layout is far more difficult and costly to correct once a project is underway. I would encourage every aspiring designer to spend time studying spatial planning and to become genuinely comfortable with technical drawings. Good creative decisions start with a solid technical foundation. Clients who work with a designer who understands both the technical and aesthetic dimensions of a project get a far better result.

How do you see the interior design industry evolving in the year ahead?

One shift I am already seeing is a move away from the perfectly curated, trend-driven interior towards spaces that feel personal, warm and genuinely lived in. With the rise of AI and social media, design trends spread quickly and spaces can start to look very similar as a result. Discerning homeowners are becoming more aware of this and are increasingly looking to create homes that have real character and personal meaning rather than simply reflecting what is popular at a given moment.

This is where the value of a personalised, relationship-led service becomes more important. A designer who takes the time to understand how a client actually lives and who is prepared to go deeper rather than take on more projects will produce results that are unique and personal. I think clients will continue to seek that kind of thoughtful collaboration.

On the technology side, smart home automation is becoming an expected part of high-end residential design rather than an optional extra and integrating those systems from the outset requires careful planning. Sustainability is also increasingly front of mind: more clients are asking questions about where materials come from and how products are made. I believe that will only grow as a priority in the years ahead.

What does being an SBID Accredited Interior Designer mean to you?

It means being part of a professional body that holds the industry to a standard I believe in. Interior design is a field where expertise and accountability genuinely matter: clients are making significant financial and personal decisions based on a designer’s advice. The SBID accreditation signals that I have met a recognised professional benchmark. For my clients, it provides an additional layer of confidence when choosing to work with me.

As an independent designer working directly with clients on every project, it can be easy to work in isolation. SBID accreditation connects me to a wider community of designers and gives me access to industry events, networking opportunities and continued professional development that I would not otherwise have as a sole practitioner. Those resources matter: staying connected to the industry, learning from other professionals and keeping my knowledge current all feed directly into the quality of work I deliver for my clients.

Anita de Villiers, The Story Behind Anita de Villiers Interior Design: Creating Layered and Timeless Spaces
Anita de Villiers, Founder of Anita de Villiers Interior Design

About Anita de Villiers Interior Design

Anita de Villiers runs a boutique interior design studio in Surrey, specialising in elegant, considered interiors for homeowners who value quality and personal connection. Providing a dedicated one-to-one experience, Anita personally manages every stage of the design journey. Her work is defined by a respect for architectural integrity and quiet luxury, creating layered spaces that remain timeless as trends evolve. Whether overseeing a full renovation or a single room, Anita guides her clients with a structured process that brings clarity to every decision. She creates sophisticated, functional homes designed around how you live.

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