Interior reno clip trending
An interior renovation video from @Interiorarchdes reached about 41k views and 190 likes today, showing a compact makeover approach that’s getting attention for budget‑conscious viewers (x.com). (x.com)
A renovation clip from the X account @Interiorarchdes was circulating on Sunday, April 12, after the post at the center of the spike drew roughly 41,000 views and about 190 likes on X. (x.com) The post itself was difficult to scrape directly through public web tools on Sunday, but mirrors of the account identify @Interiorarchdes as an interior design and architecture video account with tens of thousands of followers and a feed built around short makeover clips. (24vids.com) That format fits a larger social-media pattern in home design: short before-and-after videos that show one room, one layout problem, and one visible fix in under a minute. Houzz and HGTV both continue to surface compact-room searches and small-bathroom design packages as high-interest categories in 2026. (houzz.com) (hgtv.com) The design logic behind many of these clips is straightforward: use mirrors, brighter finishes, and storage that moves onto walls so the floor reads as less crowded. HGTV’s current small-bathroom guides emphasize space-saving solutions, while Houzz’s bathroom coverage highlights mirror-and-lighting pairings that make tight rooms feel easier to use. (hgtv.com) (houzz.com) Storage is usually the other half of the makeover formula. HGTV’s bathroom storage guide focuses on adding room for towels, paper goods, and cleaning supplies without expanding the footprint, a common constraint in apartments and older homes. (hgtv.com) That emphasis on compact upgrades also lines up with what design platforms are publishing for 2026. Houzz is still pushing large volumes of small-space inspiration, and HGTV’s current renovation packages frame small bathrooms as rooms where a limited budget can still produce a visible change. (houzz.com) (hgtv.com) In practice, clips like the one linked here work because they compress the whole sales pitch into a few seconds: less clutter, more light, and a room that looks larger without moving walls. That is the same promise running through the mainstream small-space advice now dominating design search pages and social feeds. (hgtv.com) (houzz.com)