There is a specific kind of domestic frustration that no renovation show has ever solved: the gap between knowing a room could be better and knowing what better actually looks like. Interior designers charge by the hour. Mood boards are beautiful and irrelevant. And the furniture in catalog photography bears no relationship to the furniture you can afford. SpAIces, a free AI-powered space transformation tool launched at spaices.co, is a direct attack on this problem.
The proposition is straightforward. Upload a photograph of any indoor room or outdoor yard. Select a design style from the available presets — Scandinavian, Bohemian, Tropical, Modern Farmhouse, Industrial, Mid-Century Modern. Receive a photorealistic before-and-after visualization in approximately thirty seconds. No account. No credit card. No sign-up friction of any kind. The before-and-after pair is displayed with a draggable slider, so the comparison is immediate and visceral.
The business model is what makes the pricing possible: SpAIces earns affiliate commissions when users purchase items surfaced through the shop-the-look feature, which provides contextual links to Amazon, Etsy, Home Depot, and Wayfair products visible in each generated design. The incentive is structurally aligned with user outcomes — the tool earns when it shows users things they actually want to buy, not when it captures their attention for advertisers.
The outdoor capability is where SpAIces separates from most competitors, which tend to focus on interior rooms. Enter a zip code and the AI maps to your USDA Plant Hardiness Zone, filtering all plant recommendations to varieties that will survive your specific regional winters. Ham Lake, Minnesota gardeners receive Zone 4 suggestions. Miami gardeners receive Zone 10. This is a meaningful distinction for anyone who has purchased a beautiful specimen in May only to watch it die in November.