Just to offer my 2 cents,
I'm currently working on a C# project that has a separate project holding all the interfaces. The project was named 'framework' and was part of a larger project comprising of 10+ implementations of interfaces from that framework project. My guess was (which is also later confirmed by my immediate superior) is that it fully separates implementations from design, something called loose coupling.
That way various projects that inherit from the framework project can be separately developed or swapped out independently. From a developer that's new to the project, it's easier for him/her to get acquainted with all the methods that are used in other projects in one central place. Adding new methods or removing old ones are all done in one project, and every other project that uses those interfaces have a strict 'contract' to follow. In essence it assists with maintaining the project in the long run.
It also makes it easier to create mockups of certain parts of the framework during testing, to isolate each class individually and test them for possible errors.
It assists in adhering to the interface segregation principle in which if a particular interface has for example only a 'save' method, but we need 'log' and 'read' for specific implementation classes, we can just create another interface that will inherit from the parent interface, all in the framework project, and no wade around in different projects to find the interface we want to add. I found this when researching on Interface Segregation Principle.
compile
dependency and the implementation code withruntime
dependency. This means that you are always only compiling against the public API. This is essentially emulating what the, for example, JavaEE APIs have been doing for a very long time.