Kitchen Snap is adaptive design software that shapes itself around your space and your needs. The mobile app scans a room into a millimetre-accurate digital twin, AI furnishes it to your brief — and then mixed reality projects the finished design into the real room. You walk through your future interior before a single panel is cut.
Kitchens, wardrobes, whole interiors — people commit five-figure budgets based on a 2D floor plan and a showroom sample. The imagination gap kills conversions, mis-measured spaces kill margins, and every revision means another visit from a technician with a tape measure.
Manufacturers asked us for something better than a configurator: software that adapts to the customer's actual room and actual needs — and proves the result before production starts.
Scan. The mobile app uses LiDAR and photogrammetry to capture the room — walls, windows, doors, plumbing, sockets — into a precise digital twin in under a minute.
Generate. Our constraint-solving placement engine furnishes the twin automatically: it knows ergonomic zones, build rules and the manufacturer's live catalogue, so every proposal is buildable and priced. A design assistant turns plain sentences — “family of five, corner pantry, induction” — into revised layouts, and AI rendering makes them photorealistic.
Walk through. Point the phone at the room and the design appears in it, anchored 1:1 in mixed reality. Customers open cabinet doors, swap decors and see daylight fall on the worktop — standing in their own home.
What we built
These four kitchens were generated by the live KitchenSnap engine — the same pipeline customers use. Unretouched renders, each grounded in real catalogue cabinetry and verified by the two-stage AI audit.




Kitchen Snap runs in production for a national kitchen retailer, in showrooms and in customers' homes — its web engine ships today as the AI Kitchen Designer. Scan-to-first-proposal takes under three minutes, AR placement holds ±2 cm — and showroom conversion rose measurably. The platform behind it expands next to wardrobes, bathrooms and office fit-outs.
“Customers stop scrolling a catalogue and start walking through their own kitchen. The moment the design shows up in their room, the deal is half closed.”