Depends heavily on a space. Some are naturally photogenic and retain attractive features even when lit like a pig. Others...not so much.
The biggest issue is flatness (no direction to create depth and contours of features), and temperature homogenity (sun/sky naturally provide opposite tones blending, sky can be an opponent to warm artificial lights, but artificial lights alone are issue).
Few things to overcome the issue a bit:
-Addition of flashlights or softboxes. Like photographer, if you don't have soft or direct light on scene, create one. Hide to a side of camera, or somewhere, to create contrast, grounding, or depth.
-Counter the homogenity of light intensity, quick example: Make ceiling spotlights weaker, and floor/wall lamps accents stronger.
-Counter the homogenity of light temperature. In reality, most light bulbs would be like 2800K or so, the average "slightly warm" most people use. You can change this and not all to same.