A competitive programme that searches for Britain’s most talented amateur interior designer.A competitive programme that searches for Britain’s most talented amateur interior designer.A competitive programme that searches for Britain’s most talented amateur interior designer.
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
British interior designers are so much different than American ones it seems. I like the quirky design from some of the contestants. However, the hosts are terrible at times. Their opinion changes so easily and I am not sure what parameters they judge by. Has anyone noticed how the hosts never change their clothes even though the timelines stretches across 3 days? Weird.
I've watched the Great Pottery Throwdown as well as the Sewing Bee. One of the pottery judges is often overwhelmed by emotion by some pieces - and I always see why and sometimes share the emotion. In Sewing Bee, the judges are cooler but clearly very competent both on design and manufacture. Nobody goes to the next round or is dropped without if being clearly explained and fairly obviously right.
On Design Challenge, the judging criteria is inconsistent - a designer who delights the client is dropped yet a designer who gets strong criticism goes through to the next round on the specious grounds of the judge's confidence that the designer will learn from their mistakes and do better better next time. With just two judges there is no-one to arbitrate. Here we have the ferociously forceful former The Appprentice Dragon-Lady Kelly Hoppen MBE teamed with rather limp and eager to fit in, Daniel Hopwood. At last they have brought in a third judge - someone who clearly has an independent mind and complete willingness to fully explain her view.
The designer who disappoints her clients has just done it again. Without the new third judge, I think she would have won the series.
When a waiter asks a group at a table if they have enjoyed their meals, there is much nodding of heads and "Very nice" comments. As soon as the waiter is out of ear-shot, the group erupts with criticism. "Very Nice" is the polite default, not wishing to offend or spoil the occasion. But voiced criticism means real wont-come-here-again disappointment.
I watched four seasons and was loving it, especially the smart architecture history. But Season 4was a huge disappointment. I knew who the winner would be from the start, and I was right, damn it. Too bad, because 2 better designers lost out to the judges' pet.
The designers were interesting to watch. Since they were all amateurs I found myself wondering if the people whose rooms were redone had some recourse to compensation if they couldn't stand the finished product.
I loved the host and his explanations of the history of the buildings.
I hated the judging. This again is an example of the worst person winning for no apparent reason. The other finalist did so much better than he did. If that had been my house I would have ripped everything he did out and started over from scratch.
I loved the host and his explanations of the history of the buildings.
I hated the judging. This again is an example of the worst person winning for no apparent reason. The other finalist did so much better than he did. If that had been my house I would have ripped everything he did out and started over from scratch.
Season 2 designers brought, for the most part, a higher standard of product and ability. Season 3 has been disappointing to say the least. The workmanship and materials have been disappointing. I would not want the inferior workmanship or materials in my home.
Did you know
- ConnectionsFeatured in Too Much TV: Episode #1.2 (2016)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Najlepszy projektant wnętrz
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime50 minutes
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was The Great Interior Design Challenge (2014) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer