Where We Came From

Darrin Burton

Interiors with Elegance was founded by Darrin Burton nearly two decades ago. The beginnings were an office in his garage and one installer (himself). As demand for renovations grew, so did our business. We eventually expanded to a separate carpet store and a separate bathroom store. Later, we joined the stores together and added a kitchen renovations department.

We purchased our own building, warehouse, and custom mill-work facility in 2001 which has evolved over the years to keep in step with current showroom trends and become more savvy in the use of technology creating our new Design Studio.

Darrin remains as the acting operator and oversees not only day-to-day activities within the office, but also sales.  We now have twelve construction crews in the field running efficiently under the watchful eye of our Site Manager.

We continue to grow with the Calgary market and get many accolades in the process.  Interiors With Elegance was excited and proud to be a Consumers Choice Award Winner for 2011 in the Home Improvement and Renovation category. Our in-house team was honored to be recognized for it’s commitment to great service, and our renovation construction experts were thrilled to receive accolades for the commitment to unique and high-quality work.

CCA_Tag_2011

Our Specialties

Home Renovations 90
Kitchen Renovations 95
Basement Developments 90
Bathroom Renovations 96
New Home Construction 80
Additions 75

Which Renovation Style Are You?

Traditional
Traditional
Traditional design is the most formal and dignified of all interiors. It is characterized by Classical detailing, moldings and paneling and cabinetry often consists of inset doors with molding, applied molding or curved, raised panels.
Transitional
Transitional
Transitional is as the name suggests, a modern combination of both Traditional and Contemporary design, blending the dignified feel of traditional styling with modern, clean elements of contemporary style.
Contemporary
Contemporary
Contemporary design has an emphasis on architectural shapes, with strong, lineal interest created by blocks of space defined by connective elements. When doors are not stainless steel or glass, they are typically slab doors.