Studio Darlene Brown

Boutique interior design for hospitality, residential, and learning environments. Based in South Florida, working nationally and internationally.

Contemporary interiors shaped by concept, context, and experience.

A boutique interior design practice creating refined environments where architecture, material depth, and lived experience feel resolved as one authored whole.

Four Seasons Anguilla — resort lobby with sculptural wood chandelier and warm stone surfaces
Featured work Four Seasons Anguilla

Resort hospitality with architectural warmth, framed Caribbean views, and a polished residential ease.

Chrysalis Resort — aerial view of butterfly-inspired resort layout surrounded by tropical landscape
The Landmark — elegant residential amenity space with curved seating and natural light
Studio essence

A practice grounded in architecture, atmosphere, and tailored response.

The studio reads each commission as a spatial brief with cultural, climatic, and behavioral conditions already inside it. The design work is to make those conditions feel authored, elegant, and memorable.

Practice areas

Hospitality, residential, and learning environments with a calm point of view.

The work adapts across typologies, but the ambition stays consistent: interiors that feel clear, atmospheric, and durable enough to hold memory over time.

Signature process

A clear design path from discovery through refinement.

The process is paced like a sequence, not a dashboard. Each phase narrows noise, sharpens intent, and keeps the project moving toward an authored spatial language.

Proof of experience

A practice shaped by architecture, hospitality leadership, and authored interiors.

Large-studio rigor, boutique attention, and a point of view shaped by architecture as much as interiors.

Global hospitality

Experience across resorts, hotels, and branded environments informs how arrival, circulation, and atmosphere are sequenced for guests.

Residential calm

Work in luxury living environments sharpens the studio's sensitivity to comfort, proportion, amenity planning, and the rituals of daily use.

Architectural discipline

Education and training in architecture keep concept, material, and spatial hierarchy tied to one another rather than treated as separate layers.

The studio perspective has been built inside global firms, luxury hospitality teams, and independent practice. That breadth matters because it sharpens judgment without flattening the work into a generic formula.

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Core sectors

Hospitality, residential, and education work inform the studio's breadth.

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Major studio chapters

Experience across Gensler, Kelly Wearstler, Simeone Deary, and independent practice.

Global

Project perspective

Work spans the Caribbean, China, Saudi Arabia, Los Angeles, and beyond.

Tailored

Client fit

Each project is framed by context and collaboration rather than a repeated formula.

Chrysalis Resort — butterfly-inspired luxury resort concept with illuminated pathways at dusk
Contact readiness

If the project is still taking shape, that is often the ideal moment to begin.

Whether the scope is defined or still forming, the best starting point is a clear exchange about ambition, place, and what the space needs to feel like.

Client confidence

Questions answered before the first call.

A clear first exchange tends to lead to better work.

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