Without searching and being fairly new here, I'm guessing there's been a lot of discussion around this, but let me give an answer anyway.
First, I'd ask what you mean by a 'large' project? I've seen some people label a project taking a few months and involving 4 or 5 programmers as a 'large project'. To others, a 'large project' means a multiple year duration and 30 or 40 devs. I'll assume it's somewhere in the middle, given you mention 'several developers'. To be safe, let's assume it's a half year to a year in duration with 5-10 devs.
As others have said, if you're doing TDD you'd start with the tests first, not a lot of design work. The design is emergent. In practice, however, I think there's a balance between the TDD approach (which I see as valuable but not essential) and simply ensuring you have good unit test coverage, which is essential in my view.
If you're a coder yourself and you have experience with TDD, I'd suggest you should be practicing what you'll be preaching. Rather than trying to design the whole system at an abstract level, definining interfaces, and so on, choose a core piece of the system. Make sure to do the simplest thing possible, get a green bar, refactor, add another test, and so on.
The biggest impediment to using TDD on a project with multiple developers is lack of experience with the methodology. Give your programmers a concrete example (even if it's a small bit of functionality) that really shows them how to do it the right way, pair with people as they come onto the project, have regular reviews of people's unit tests, and make sure it continues to be a topic that's at the forefront of what you're doing, not just an afterthought. If you're doing Scrum, make it part of your definition of 'done' for any task/story.
I'd also spend some time setting up something like EMMA or Cobertura (big fan of Cobertura), so you have some hard metrics by which to assess people's tests . effective your tests are, but they are a data point. If you have 20% test coverage, you can be pretty sure people aren't writing the tests they should. Conversely, just because you have 90% test coverage doesn't ensure the tests are good, which is the reason for things like pairing and reviews.
So, the simple answer is: give your guys an example, focus on pairing/reviews, and put some things in place like a code coverage tool to help keep the team honest.