This licensing act will enable you to use your design skills to the fullest extent of your capabilities for the benefit of the public’s health, safety and welfare.
Interior Designers in Tennessee are currently regulated by architectural law and regulatory board policy that imposes such severe limits and/or restrictions on their practice that they cannot fully use their expertise to enhance the places people work, live and play.
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Because Tennessee law doesn’t recognize interior designers as licensed professionals, they are prevented from practicing in many non-residential spaces over 5,000 sf and are not allowed to do any work in assembly, institutional or educational occupancies of any size. It also limits work in tenant spaces to the maintenance of finishes or rearrangement of furnishings unless the space is under 5,000 sf AND is separated from other tenants by a minimum 2-hr. rating. This 2-hr restriction, much more stringent than the state building code, effectively eliminating the ability of interior designers to perform the work for which they are trained and qualified. What client wants to unnecessarily pay for extra fire-rated construction costs just to be able to work with an interior designer? Or to pay for the added cost of an additional licensed professional in addition to an Interior Designer? The provisions of this legislation will provide the opportunity for interior designers to compete in the open marketplace, improve consumer choice, and fulfill their professional potential.
You invest a great deal of time and money in your education. Make your investment count.
Interior design, which requires intensive education, should be recognized as a distinct licensed profession that masters specific skill sets.
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Currently, anyone in Tennessee can represent himself or herself as an Interior Designer. Such a broad categorization without qualification not only places consumers and the public at risk, but also devalues your education and limits your future. By mandating requirements for education, experience and examination, the legislation will establish “Interior Designer” as a recognized and respected professional.
Interior Designers are the only major design participants in the construction industry that are not licensed.
As the only major design participants in the Tennessee construction industry that are not licensed, Interior Designers are not accorded the respect or responsibility of other professionals; as a result, they are not able to practice to the full extent of their training and capabilities.
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The 2006 International Building Code which governs construction in Tennessee states that “(t)he construction documents shall be prepared by a registered design professional where required by the statutes of the jurisdiction in which the project is to be constructed” (106.1). Since Interior Designers cannot meet this requirement on large commercial and high-risk projects until they are licensed, they can only produce such work under the guidance and oversight of a licensed architect or engineer.