Article Contents:
- Anatomy of premium: what makes molding expensive
- Polyurethane density: mass determines quality
- Relief detailing: depth that matters
- Mold quality: precision that forgives no errors
- Factory primer: the foundation of durability
- Pricing: economics of the premium segment
- Cost of budget molding (60 mm width, simple profile)
- Cost of premium molding (80 mm width, complex ornamental profile)
- Retail markup
- Elite molding in interiors: where premium reveals itself
- Formal living rooms: ceiling height 4-6 meters
- Staircase spaces: vertical requires precision
- Dining and banquet halls: classic requires authenticity
- Is the high cost justified: economic analysis
- Criterion 1: Service life
- Criterion 2: Visual impact
- Criterion 3: Contextual fit
- Criterion 4: Project scale
- Application of premium molding: design solutions
- Hidden lighting in cornices: technology and aesthetics
- Column decoration: capitals and bases
- Fireplaces: portals and frames
- Frequently asked questions about premium molding
- Can premium molding be visually distinguished from budget molding?
- Does premium molding require special installation?
- Is it worth buying premium molding for an apartment of 60-80 m²?
- Which brands produce premium polyurethane molding?
- Can premium molding be painted independently?
- How to verify that the molding is truly premium, and not just marketing?
- Conclusion: Premium as a Philosophy
Price does not always reflect value, but in the world of architectural decor, this rule works flawlessly.Polyurethane molding is expensiveit differs from budget options not just by the numbers on the price tag—it differs in the detailing of the relief with depth down to a millimeter, material density of 400-450 kg/m³ versus the standard 250-300 kg/m³, and the absence of a single defect in a batch of a thousand elements. This is molding that cannot be distinguished from handcrafted plaster or carved wood even upon close inspection. This is decor that, after twenty years of use, looks just as flawless as on the day of installation.
In the luxury real estate segment, molding is not an ornament, but a necessity. An apartment costing 150-500 million rubles, a country mansion with an area of 800-1500 square meters, a penthouse with a view of the historic center—all these spaces require appropriate decor. Budget molding in such a context looks like dissonance, a visual compromise, an inappropriate saving. Premium molding costs 3-5 times more, but it matches the level of the property, emphasizes status, and creates that very atmosphere of luxurious restraint that cannot be faked.
This article is an excursion into the world of expensive polyurethane decor. We will analyze the criteria of premium quality (what exactly makes molding expensive), technological differences in production (why some elements cost 500 rubles, others 5000 rubles despite external similarity), application in elite projects (specific examples of interiors where premium molding reveals its potential), and the economic justification for the high cost (whether the overpayment is justified, when it makes sense, when it is excessive). The goal is to provide a tool for informed choice, understanding value, and smart investment in decor.
Anatomy of Premium: What Makes Molding Expensive
Polyurethane remains polyurethane—the chemical formula is unchanged. But between a budget cornice at 300 rubles per meter and a premium one at 2500 rubles lies an abyss of technological subtleties that are not obvious to a non-professional but are critical to the result.
Polyurethane Density: Mass Determines Quality
Budget molding is made from polyurethane with a density of 200-280 kg/m³. The material is lightweight (a cornice 100 mm wide, 2 meters long weighs 1.2-1.8 kg), cheap to produce (raw material consumption is minimal), but has drawbacks: low relief clarity (small details are blurred, ornament edges are rounded), porosity (micro-pores on the surface visible upon close inspection), fragility (may crack or break upon impact), deformation when heated (in summer on the sunny side, the cornice may sag slightly).
Premium molding is made from polyurethane with a density of 350-450 kg/m³. The same cornice weighs 2.5-4 kg—twice as heavy. The material is more expensive (raw material consumption is twice as high), the technology is more complex (requires slow mold pouring, degassing under vacuum to remove bubbles, long polymerization of 24-48 hours instead of 6-12 hours), but the result is qualitatively different: absolute relief clarity (details are worked to a depth of 0.5 mm, edges are sharp, like wood carving), pore-free surface (smooth, dense, visually indistinguishable from plaster or wood), strength (withstands impacts without damage), dimensional stability (does not deform at temperatures up to +60°C).
How to check density: weigh an element of known dimensions, calculate the volume (length × width × thickness), divide mass by volume. Density less than 300 kg/m³—budget segment. 300-350 kg/m³—medium. More than 350 kg/m³—premium.
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Relief Detailing: Depth That Matters
The ornament on molding is perceived as a whole, but a professional eye sees the detailing. An acanthus leaf on a budget cornice is a stylized image with 3-5 large lobes, relief depth 5-8 mm, transitions between planes are smooth (rounded). On a premium cornice, the same leaf is a botanically accurate image with 12-20 small lobes, veins, pointed tips, relief depth 15-25 mm, transitions are sharp (edges, steps).
This difference is critical for perception. From a distance, both cornices look decorative, but up close, the budget one reveals simplification, schematics—it becomes obvious that it's mass reproduction. The premium one, even upon close inspection, maintains the illusion of handcraft—each element of the ornament is drawn, textured, alive.
Technology for achieving detailing: complex multi-stage mold (master model created by a sculptor by hand, then scanned with a 3D scanner, refined in CAD programs, milled on a CNC machine from high-precision material, a silicone mold with an accuracy of up to 0.1 mm is made from this model), high-density polyurethane (fills the smallest details of the mold without bubbles or gaps), manual finishing (after casting, the element is checked, minor defects are removed manually with cutters).
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Mold Quality: Precision That Does Not Forgive Mistakes
The mold for casting molding is the main asset of production. Budget manufacturers use molds made of polyurethane rubber (service life 200-500 castings, reproduction accuracy ±1-2 mm, after 100 castings details begin to blur—the mold wears out). The cost of such a mold is 15-50 thousand rubles—recouped over 50-100 sales.
Premium manufacturers use molds made of high-density silicone (service life 2000-5000 castings, accuracy ±0.1-0.3 mm, details retain clarity until the last casting) or metal composite molds (practically eternal, accuracy ±0.05 mm, but rarely used due to high cost—300-800 thousand rubles per mold for one element). The cost of a premium-class silicone mold is 80-200 thousand rubles—recouped over 500-1000 sales, meaning it requires confidence in demand.
Result: each element cast from a premium mold is identical to the previous one with an accuracy of fractions of a millimeter. When installing a cornice 20 meters long (10 sections of 2 meters each), the joints between sections are practically invisible—the profile matches perfectly. Budget elements, even from the same batch, can vary by 1-3 mm in width, profile height—during installation, steps form at the joints, requiring puttying and sanding.
Factory Primer: The Foundation of Durability
Budget molding is primed by spraying (spray gun, fast, cheap), primer layer 30-60 microns, covers unevenly (thicker on protruding parts of the relief, thinner or absent in recesses). Such primer provides minimal protection; when painting, the paint may apply unevenly (where primer is thin, it absorbs into the polyurethane, where thick—it applies evenly).
Premium molding is primed by dipping (element is immersed in a primer bath, removed, excess drips off) or multi-layer spraying (3-5 thin layers with intermediate drying), final primer layer 100-150 microns, uniform over the entire surface including deep recesses of the relief. Such primer provides an ideal base for painting (paint applies evenly, color is uniform), protects polyurethane from ultraviolet light (extends service life), improves adhesion during installation (glue holds stronger).
Visual difference: budget primer may have a slight gray or yellowish tint (cheap pigments), premium primer is perfectly white (high-quality titanium dioxide, expensive, but ensures color purity).
Pricing: The Economics of the Premium Segment
Why do some moldings cost 250 rubles per meter, others 2500 rubles—a 10-fold difference? Let's break down the cost and margin.
Cost of a budget molding (width 60 mm, simple profile)
Low-density polyurethane—80 rub./meter (material cheap, consumption 300 grams per meter at a density of 250 kg/m³).
Mold amortization—5 rub./meter (mold costing 20000 rub., service life 400 castings of 2 meters each = 800 meters, 20000÷800=25 rub., but the mold is used for several years, so actual amortization is lower).
Primer — 15 rubles/meter (cheap primer, thin layer).
Packaging — 10 rubles/meter (shrink film).
Electricity, labor, overhead costs — 40 rubles/meter.
Total cost: 150 rubles/meter. Sale at 250 rubles/meter — margin 100 rubles (40%). With production volumes of 10-20 thousand meters per month, profit is 1-2 million rubles per month. Mass production business model.
Cost of premium molding (width 80 mm, complex ornamental profile)
High-density polyurethane — 320 rubles/meter (expensive raw material, consumption 800 grams per meter at a density of 400 kg/m³).
Mold depreciation — 80 rubles/meter (mold costs 150,000 rubles, service life 3000 castings of 2 meters each = 6000 meters, 150000÷6000=25 rubles, but the calculation includes mold renewal every 2-3 years to maintain quality).
Premium primer — 60 rubles/meter (multi-layered, dense, snow-white).
Manual finishing — 50 rubles/meter (a master checks each element, removes minor defects, takes 5-10 minutes of work per meter, pay 600 rubles/hour).
Packaging — 30 rubles/meter (individual packaging with foam inserts, protection against damage during transportation).
Quality control — 20 rubles/meter (each element is checked against 15 parameters).
Electricity, skilled labor, overhead costs — 140 rubles/meter.
Total cost: 700 rubles/meter. Sale at 2500 rubles/meter — margin 1800 rubles (257%). It seems huge, but with volumes of 500-1000 meters per month (narrow premium segment) profit is 0.9-1.8 million rubles per month — comparable to the mass segment. Business model of piece production with high added value.
Retail markup
The manufacturer sells to dealers with a markup of 30-50%. Dealers sell to end customers with a markup of 40-80%. As a result, the retail price can be 1.8-2.7 times higher than the factory price.
Premium brands often sell directly or through exclusive dealers with fixed prices — price control, protection against dumping, preservation of a high-quality image.
Elite stucco in interiors: where premium reveals itself
Not every interior requires premium stucco. In a small apartment with 2.7-meter ceilings and a renovation budget of 2-3 million rubles, the difference between budget and premium stucco will be unnoticeable — the scale is not there, details are not examined, operating conditions are not critical. Premium reveals itself in large spaces, where stucco becomes an architectural element, not just decor.
Formal living rooms: ceiling height 4-6 meters
In a living room 5 meters high, with an area of 80-120 m², a ceiling cornice 250-300 mm wide is perceived as part of the architecture. It is seen in its entirety, from a distance of 8-10 meters, under different lighting angles (daylight from windows, evening artificial, hidden lighting). Here, the clarity of the relief is critical — blurred details of a budget cornice are perceived as simplification, cheapness. A premium cornice with deep relief (20-30 mm), detailed ornamentation (each acanthus leaf is drawn) creates a sense of palace-like grandeur, historical authenticity.
Project example: penthouse in the historical center of Moscow, area 450 m², ceilings 4.8 meters. A premium-class ceiling cornice 280 mm wide with an Empire style ornament (laurel wreaths, rosettes, meander) was used. Cost of cornice 2800 rubles/meter, total length 120 meters (perimeter of all rooms), total 336,000 rubles just for cornices. Installation, painting with gilding — another 280,000 rubles. Total ceiling decor 616,000 rubles. With a total renovation budget of 35 million, this is 1.76% — a justified investment creating the visual dominant of the interior.
Staircase spaces: vertical requires precision
A staircase in a country house — a vertical composition 6-10 meters high (two-three floors). Hereelite polyurethane stuccois used for decorating walls along the staircase: moldings form panels, pilasters create a vertical rhythm, rosettes 400-600 mm in diameter are installed on wall sections. The scale is enormous — the stucco is visible from all levels, examined when ascending and descending, from different viewpoints. Geometric precision is critical — if moldings are installed unevenly (deviation of 5-10 mm from vertical or horizontal), it is immediately visible against the backdrop of wall and stair verticals. Premium stucco with dimensional accuracy of ±0.3 mm allows for perfectly straight lines to be installed.
Project example: country mansion in the Moscow region, staircase height 9 meters (three floors). Along the staircase, pilasters 3 meters high (from the floor of each floor to the ceiling) are installed, spacing 1.5 meters, total 12 pilasters. Each pilaster consists of a base (20,000 rub.), a shaft (35,000 rub.), a capital (45,000 rub.), total 100,000 rub./pilaster. 12 pilasters × 100,000 = 1,200,000 rubles just for pilasters. Plus moldings for panels between pilasters (250,000 rub.), rosettes (180,000 rub.), installation and painting (400,000 rub.). Total staircase space decor 2,030,000 rubles. With a house cost of 120 million, this is 1.69% — an adequate share of decor in the overall budget.
Dining and banquet halls: classic requires authenticity
A dining room in a classical style (Baroque, Classicism, Empire) without stucco is a stylistic incompleteness. Walls are divided by moldings into panels (boiserie), the ceiling is adorned with a rosette 800-1200 mm in diameter around the chandelier, a cornice frames the ceiling perimeter. Here, the historical authenticity of the ornament is important — acanthus leaves must correspond to the botanical accuracy of the 17th-18th centuries, palmettes to the proportions of antique samples, meander to classical Greek canons. Budget stucco often simplifies ornaments to schematism — they are recognizable, but inauthentic. Premium reproduces historical samples with museum accuracy.
Project example: dining room in an apartment in a Stalin-era building, area 40 m², ceilings 3.6 meters. Style — Soviet Empire of the 1950s. Premium stucco was used: ceiling rosette 1000 mm in diameter (68,000 rub.), cornice with ornament in the form of laurel wreaths (1800 rub./meter, 20 meters = 36,000 rub.), moldings for wall panels (950 rub./meter, 60 meters = 57,000 rub.), 8 corner overlays (4500 rub./pc. = 36,000 rub.). Total materials 197,000 rubles. Installation and painting 150,000 rubles. Total 347,000 rubles. With a dining room renovation budget of 3.5 million, this is 9.9% — a high share, but justified by stylistic integrity.
Is the high cost justified: economic analysis
Criterion 1: Service Life
Budget molding lasts 10-15 years, then requires replacement (paint peels, relief wears in contact areas, polyurethane yellows on the sunny side, small cracks appear). Cost 250 rub./meter, service life 12 years — annual operating cost 20.8 rub./meter.
Premium molding lasts 30-50 years without loss of quality (dense polyurethane does not yellow, high-quality primer and paint last for decades, relief does not wear). Cost 2500 rub./meter, service life 40 years — annual operating cost 62.5 rub./meter.
Conclusion: premium is 3 times more expensive to operate annually, but considering savings on replacement (removal of old, purchase of new, installation — additional expenses every 10-15 years for budget) the difference shrinks to 1.5-2 times. If the interior is created for the long term (country house where you plan to live 20-30 years), premium is economically justified.
Criterion 2: Visual Impact
Interiors with premium molding are photographed for magazines, participate in design competitions, become architects' portfolios. Budget molding rarely withstands professional photography — the simplicity of details is noticeable in photos, reduces the project's perception. If the interior is created not only for living but also for representation (receiving guests, photoshoots, publications), premium is necessary.
Conclusion: if status and visual presentation are important — premium is justified regardless of service life. It's an investment in image.
Criterion 3: Context Appropriateness
In an apartment costing 80-150 million rubles, with aged oak parquet (15000 rub./m²), custom Italian furniture (3-5 million per set), premium-brand plumbing (bath for 800000 rub., faucets at 150000 rub.), Baccarat chandeliers (from 2 million) — budget molding looks out of place. Visual dissonance, a cheap element among expensive ones. Here, premium molding is not a luxury, but a necessity for visual integrity.
Conclusion: the more expensive the overall interior context, the more critical the quality of molding. In the elite real estate segment, premium molding is mandatory.
Criterion 4: Project Scale
Small volumes (room 20 m², 15 meters of cornice, 30 meters of moldings) — cost difference between budget and premium 30-50 thousand rubles. With a total renovation budget of 1.5-2 million, this is 2-3%, not critical, you can choose premium to improve quality.
Large volumes (house 500 m², 200 meters of cornice, 800 meters of moldings, 50 rosettes, 20 pilasters) — cost difference 1-2 million rubles. With a total renovation budget of 25-30 million, this is 4-7%, noticeable. Here, a combined strategy is possible: premium in formal areas (living room, dining room, hall), mid-range in private areas (bedrooms, studies), budget in technical areas (storage rooms, utility rooms).
Application of premium molding: design solutions
Hidden lighting in cornices: technology and aesthetics
Modern technique — installation of LED strips behind ceiling cornices. Light is directed upwards, onto the ceiling, creating soft, even illumination, visually increases room height. For this, the cornice is mounted with a 10-15 cm gap from the ceiling, the strip is glued to the wall behind the cornice.
Critical: the cornice must completely hide the strip when viewed from below, but not block the light.Premium moldinghas precise dimensions (cornice projection from wall 80-120 mm, depending on model), allowing calculation of lighting geometry with millimeter accuracy. Budget may differ by ±5-10 mm from stated dimensions — during installation it's discovered that the strip is visible from under the cornice or light is blocked, requiring rework.
Decorating columns: capitals and bases
Interior columns (load-bearing or decorative) require finishing — capitals at the top, bases at the bottom. Premium capitals made of high-density polyurethane (Doric, Ionic, Corinthian, Composite orders) reproduce antique models with archaeological accuracy: number of volutes on an Ionic capital (4 pieces, two on each visible side), proportions of the abacus (top slab), detailing of acanthus leaves on a Corinthian capital (each leaf consists of 9-15 lobes, veins are drawn).
Cost of a premium capital for a column 300 mm in diameter — 35000-80000 rubles depending on order (simple Doric cheaper, complex Corinthian more expensive). Budget analog 8000-15000 rubles, but ornament is simplified — volutes are schematic, leaves are conventional.
Project: living room with four decorative columns 3.2 meters high, 350 mm diameter, Corinthian order. Premium capitals — 65000 rub./pc. × 4 = 260000 rub. Bases — 38000 rub./pc. × 4 = 152000 rub. Shafts (smooth, from polyurethane sections) — 18000 rub./column × 4 = 72000 rub. Total 484000 rubles for four columns. Visual effect — antique architecture, reproduced with museum accuracy.
Fireplaces: portals and surrounds
Fireplace (wood-burning, gas, or electric) — compositional center of the living room. Fireplace portal (surround of the firebox) is created with moldings, pilasters, consoles. Premium molding here is critical — the fireplace is viewed from close distance (1-2 meters), details are visible, simplicity of ornament is immediately noticeable.
Typical solution: portal 1.5 meters wide, 1.2 meters high. Two pilasters on sides of firebox (capital + shaft, each 45000 rub. = 90000 rub.), horizontal molding on top (fireplace shelf, carved, 28000 rub.), decorative overlay above firebox (cartouche with heraldic ornament, 15000 rub.). Total portal 133000 rubles. With fireplace cost including installation 800000-1500000 rubles, this is 9-17% — a proportionate share of decor.
Frequently asked questions about premium molding
Can you visually distinguish premium molding from budget?
Yes, but experience is required. Signs of premium: absolute clarity of relief (edges sharp, details drawn to the millimeter), pore-free smooth surface (no micropores upon close inspection), perfectly white factory primer (no gray or yellowish tint), weight (premium cornice 100 mm wide weighs 2-3 kg per meter, budget 1-1.5 kg). For a non-professional, the difference is noticeable only with direct comparison.
Does premium molding require special installation?
No, the installation technology is standard (polyurethane or acrylic adhesive, fixation until setting). However, due to the greater weight of premium molding, it is important to use a stronger adhesive (polyurethane with adhesion of 8-12 kg/cm² instead of acrylic with 4-6 kg/cm²) and fix it longer (2-4 hours instead of 1-2 hours for budget molding).
Is it worth buying premium molding for an apartment with an area of 60-80 m²?
It depends on the budget and priorities. If the total renovation budget is 4-6 million rubles, the difference in the cost of molding (premium instead of budget) will be 80-150 thousand rubles (this is 2-3% of the budget). For this money, you will get a significantly higher quality and more durable decor. If the budget is limited to 2-3 million, the difference of 100-150 thousand is more noticeable (5-7%), you can choose the mid-range segment (density 320-350 kg/m³, detailing higher than budget, but price lower than premium).
What brands produce premium polyurethane molding?
World leaders are Orac Decor (Belgium), NMC (Belgium), Decomaster (USA), Zambaiti (Italy). Russian premium manufacturers are companies with their own production lines, quality control, and design departments. STAVROS belongs to the Russian premium segment: own production, polyurethane density of 350-400 kg/m³, high-precision silicone molds, multi-layer primer, manual finishing of each element.
Can premium molding be painted independently?
Yes, the technology is standard (acrylic paint, roller or brush, 2-3 coats). The factory primer of premium molding is of high quality — the paint applies evenly, without stains. For effects (gilding, patination, metallics), it is recommended to involve professional painters — the technique is complex, mistakes are difficult to correct.
How to check if the molding is truly premium and not just marketing?
Request technical specifications from the seller: polyurethane density (should be 350+ kg/m³), dimensional accuracy (±0.5 mm or better), mold lifespan (2000+ castings). Weigh a sample — a premium cornice with a width of 80-100 mm should weigh 2.5-4 kg per meter. Examine the relief under side lighting (flashlight or lamp from the side) — details should be clear, without blurriness. Check the primer color — perfectly white (not gray, not yellowish).
Conclusion: Premium as a Philosophy
Expensive molding is not a whim, not an attempt by manufacturers to profit from a markup, not a marketing ploy. It is the result of technological complexity, manual labor, the use of expensive materials and molds, and multi-stage quality control. Each element goes through a journey from the sculptor creating the master model to the final inspection before packaging. This journey is long, difficult, costly—but the result justifies the investment.
In elite interiors, where every detail matters, where space is considered not as temporary housing but as a long-term living environment, as a representation of status and taste, premium molding is essential. It creates that level of quality that matches the overall context, emphasizes investments in other interior elements (furniture, finishes, appliances), and demonstrates an understanding of the value of details.
The choice between budget and premium molding is a choice between temporary and permanent, between sufficient and flawless, between compromise and perfection. In projects where durability is important (country houses for several generations), visual presentation (interiors for publications and competitions), historical authenticity (restoration or stylization for historical eras) — premium is the only correct choice.
For over twenty years, the company STAVROS has been creating architectural decor that serves for decades, delights with its craftsmanship, and embodies classical traditions and modern technologies.
STAVROS production is a synthesis of experience accumulated over a quarter of a century and innovations implemented annually. Own production lines in St. Petersburg, full cycle from design creation to packaging of the finished product, quality control at every stage. Polyurethane with a density of 350-400 kg/m³ is purchased from trusted European suppliers — the material is certified, environmentally friendly (class E1, safe for residential premises), durable (retains properties for 50+ years).
STAVROS molds are created based on the company's own designers' sketches or reproduce historical samples from museum collections (the Hermitage, the Russian Museum, Peterhof provided access to archives to create accurate replicas of decor from historical interiors). Master models are cut on the latest generation CNC machines with an accuracy of ±0.05 mm, then manually refined by sculptors. From the finished master model, a high-density silicone mold is cast — lifespan 3000-5000 cycles, reproduction accuracy ±0.1 mm.
The STAVROS assortment includes over 2000 molding items: ceiling cornices (width from 50 to 300 mm, profiles from simple classical to lush Baroque, price from 450 to 3500 rub./meter), moldings (width from 30 to 120 mm, price from 250 to 1800 rub./meter), ceiling rosettes (diameter from 200 to 1200 mm, price from 1500 to 85,000 rubles), pilasters and capitals (height from 400 to 3000 mm, set price from 15,000 to 120,000 rubles), decorative overlays (sizes from 50×50 mm to 600×800 mm, price from 400 to 15,000 rubles).
STAVROS collections cover all styles: classicism (strict proportions, symmetry, plant and geometric ornaments in the spirit of antiquity), Baroque (opulence, multi-layering, carved acanthus leaves, volutes), Empire (military symbolism, laurel wreaths, eagles, swords), Art Nouveau (smooth curved lines, iris and lily plant motifs), Art Deco (geometric zigzags, sun rays, stepped forms), modern classic (simplified profiles, minimalist ornaments, adapted to modern room proportions).
STAVROS quality is confirmed not by advertising slogans but by real projects: decor for residences in Rublyovka and Rublyovo-Uspenskoye Highway, penthouses in Moscow City towers, country estates in the Moscow region, Leningrad region, Krasnodar Krai, premium-class restaurants and hotels (Four Seasons, Ritz-Carlton used STAVROS molding in the interiors of their facilities in Russia), theaters and museums (restoration of historical interiors using replicas of original molding).
STAVROS service is not just selling materials, it is project support from idea to implementation. Designers will create sketches for the placement of molding in your interior (3D visualization, allowing you to see the result before work begins), calculate the exact number of elements (without excess or shortage), select profiles and ornaments to match the style (classicism, Baroque, modernity — each style has its own forms). Logistics will ensure delivery to any point in Russia and abroad (warehouses in Moscow and St. Petersburg, partnership with transport companies, packaging protects against damage during transportation). Installation teams (own and partner, certified by STAVROS) will perform turnkey installation with a 24-month warranty.
STAVROS prices — premium segment with justification for every ruble. Premium-class moldings 800-1800 rub./meter (density 380 kg/m³, detailing up to 0.5 mm, snow-white primer), cornices 1200-3500 rub./meter (width 120-280 mm, deep relief 20-35 mm, mold lifespan 4000+ castings), rosettes 8000-85,000 rubles (diameter 400-1200 mm, manual finishing of each element, weight up to 8 kg for large rosettes — dense polyurethane), pilasters with capitals 55,000-120,000 rubles per set (height 2.5-3 meters, Doric, Ionic, Corinthian orders with accurate reproduction of antique proportions).
Choose STAVROS — choose premium quality, tested by time and thousands of projects. Your interior deserves molding that will serve for generations. Your home deserves decor that delights with craftsmanship. Your status deserves materials that match the level. STAVROS — the choice of those who understand the value of perfection.