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  • 2025YagmurPhD

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Sustainability in Interior Design

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Published

Standard

Sustainability in Interior Design. / Sumer, Yagmur.
Lancaster University, 2025. 403 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Harvard

APA

Sumer, Y. (2025). Sustainability in Interior Design. [Doctoral Thesis, Lancaster University]. Lancaster University. https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2750

Vancouver

Sumer Y. Sustainability in Interior Design. Lancaster University, 2025. 403 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2750

Author

Sumer, Yagmur. / Sustainability in Interior Design. Lancaster University, 2025. 403 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{95c4007d1a624ba18279a1fa5db4e814,
title = "Sustainability in Interior Design",
abstract = "This research explores the evolving relationship between sustainability and interior design, placing particular emphasis on how textiles influence environmentally responsible practices in the UK. It responds to the growing demand for deeper integration of sustainability into design processes by examining how professionals navigate the often complex choices involved in selecting sustainable materials, especially fabrics.Through a combination of critical literature review with thematic analysis of interviews conducted with UK-based interior designers, the research looks closely at both internal motivations and external pressures. These include designers' own values, expectations from clients, existing regulatory structures, and market-driven constraints. The findings highlight a growing commitment among designers to environmental responsibility, tempered by persistent challenges such as limited access to reliable information, greenwashing, inconsistent certification standards, and cost-related constraints What stands out is that sustainability is not solely treated as a technical specification—it is also understood as a personal and ethical responsibility. Within this, textiles emerge as a vital yet often overlooked element, with sourcing, lifecycle considerations, and supply chain visibility playing a central role in how materials are chosen.The research offers contributions to academic discussion and real-world design practice by mapping out the main criteria behind textile selection, identifying systemic barriers and possibilities, and suggesting tangible strategies for educators, policymakers, and practitioners. As part of its practical output, the thesis presents a targeted sustainability toolkit alongside an online resource platform designed to improve awareness and knowledge across the sector. Taken together, these insights support a more critical and grounded approach to sustainable interior design that encourages long-term, ethical, and informed decision-making.",
author = "Yagmur Sumer",
year = "2025",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2750",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Sustainability in Interior Design

AU - Sumer, Yagmur

PY - 2025

Y1 - 2025

N2 - This research explores the evolving relationship between sustainability and interior design, placing particular emphasis on how textiles influence environmentally responsible practices in the UK. It responds to the growing demand for deeper integration of sustainability into design processes by examining how professionals navigate the often complex choices involved in selecting sustainable materials, especially fabrics.Through a combination of critical literature review with thematic analysis of interviews conducted with UK-based interior designers, the research looks closely at both internal motivations and external pressures. These include designers' own values, expectations from clients, existing regulatory structures, and market-driven constraints. The findings highlight a growing commitment among designers to environmental responsibility, tempered by persistent challenges such as limited access to reliable information, greenwashing, inconsistent certification standards, and cost-related constraints What stands out is that sustainability is not solely treated as a technical specification—it is also understood as a personal and ethical responsibility. Within this, textiles emerge as a vital yet often overlooked element, with sourcing, lifecycle considerations, and supply chain visibility playing a central role in how materials are chosen.The research offers contributions to academic discussion and real-world design practice by mapping out the main criteria behind textile selection, identifying systemic barriers and possibilities, and suggesting tangible strategies for educators, policymakers, and practitioners. As part of its practical output, the thesis presents a targeted sustainability toolkit alongside an online resource platform designed to improve awareness and knowledge across the sector. Taken together, these insights support a more critical and grounded approach to sustainable interior design that encourages long-term, ethical, and informed decision-making.

AB - This research explores the evolving relationship between sustainability and interior design, placing particular emphasis on how textiles influence environmentally responsible practices in the UK. It responds to the growing demand for deeper integration of sustainability into design processes by examining how professionals navigate the often complex choices involved in selecting sustainable materials, especially fabrics.Through a combination of critical literature review with thematic analysis of interviews conducted with UK-based interior designers, the research looks closely at both internal motivations and external pressures. These include designers' own values, expectations from clients, existing regulatory structures, and market-driven constraints. The findings highlight a growing commitment among designers to environmental responsibility, tempered by persistent challenges such as limited access to reliable information, greenwashing, inconsistent certification standards, and cost-related constraints What stands out is that sustainability is not solely treated as a technical specification—it is also understood as a personal and ethical responsibility. Within this, textiles emerge as a vital yet often overlooked element, with sourcing, lifecycle considerations, and supply chain visibility playing a central role in how materials are chosen.The research offers contributions to academic discussion and real-world design practice by mapping out the main criteria behind textile selection, identifying systemic barriers and possibilities, and suggesting tangible strategies for educators, policymakers, and practitioners. As part of its practical output, the thesis presents a targeted sustainability toolkit alongside an online resource platform designed to improve awareness and knowledge across the sector. Taken together, these insights support a more critical and grounded approach to sustainable interior design that encourages long-term, ethical, and informed decision-making.

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2750

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2750

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -