Article Contents:
- Visualizing the Dream: Top Trends for 2026
- Neoclassicism: Simplified Luxury
- Neo-Modern: Curves and Asymmetry
- Minimalism: Clean Lines and No Decor
- Eclecticism: Mixing Styles Within Good Taste
- Organic and Eco: Natural Materials and Textures
- Anatomy of Cost: What Makes Up the Price of Renovation
- Materials: Range from Economy to Premium
- Labor: Qualifications Determine the Cost
- Hidden Costs: What People Forget
- Molding Products: Economical Interior Framework
- Creating Structure with Molding Frames
- Ceiling Cornice: Visually Raising the Height
- Baseboards: Framing the Floor
- Comprehensive Approach: Cornice + Moldings + Baseboard
- Apartment Question: Specifics of Standard Spaces
- Low Ceilings: Visually Increasing Height
- Small Areas: Zoning Without Partitions
- Studio Apartments: Accent Walls and Visual Boundaries
- Khrushchyovka Apartments: Maximum Effect with Minimum Funds
- Balance: The Art of Compromise Between Dream and Reality
- The 80/20 Rule in Decorative Finishing
- Phased Implementation: Stretching Over Time
- DIY Approach: Saving on Labor
- Combining Materials: Expensive and Budget-Friendly
- Investing in Durability: Calculating for Decades
- The Arithmetic of Durability
- Polyurethane vs. gypsum
- Solid Wood vs. MDF
- The Psychological Value of Stability
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Aesthetics Without Ruin
The dream of a beautiful interior shatters against the prosaic question: how much does it cost? Admiring magazinewall finish photos, we rarely think about the real cost of implementation. Meanwhile, understanding the financial structure of a renovation is the key to making sensible decisions, where aesthetics do not conflict with the budget but find a balance with it.
Visualizing the Dream: Top Trends for 2026
Trends dictate what a modern interior should look like. But a trend is not dogma. It is a direction that can be adapted to one's capabilities, taste, and the specifics of the space.
Neoclassicism: Simplified Luxury
Classicism without excess is the main idea of neoclassicism. Molding frames on walls are present but simpler. Instead of carved oak panels, there are smooth MDF panels for painting, framed with polyurethane moldings. Instead of massive ceiling cornices with modillions, there is a concise profile with a single cove. Instead of gilding and patina, there are clean light colors: white, ivory, light gray.
Walls are painted with matte paint in noble shades. Dusty tones are popular—gray-blue, dusty rose, sage, beige with a gray undertone. On the wall behind the headboard of a bed or sofa, there is a molding composition of rectangular frames, creating structure without overload. The ceiling perimeter is framed by a cornice 80-100 mm wide with a simple profile. In the center, there is a rosette 40-60 cm in diameter with a delicate ornament.
Visually, neoclassicism looks expensive but is implemented affordably. Polyurethane moldings instead of wooden ones reduce the cost by 5-7 times. Painted MDF panels instead of solid wood—by 4-6 times. Elegance is preserved, and the budget remains reasonable.
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Neo-Modern: Curves and Asymmetry
Neo-modern brings back the flowing forms, smooth lines, and asymmetrical compositions of the early 20th century, adapting them to modern materials. Irregularly shaped arched openings, flexible moldings creating wavy frames on walls, asymmetrical placement of decorative overlays.
The color palette of neo-modern is richer than neoclassicism. Deep emerald, wine burgundy, royal blue, mustard ochre—colors that create drama. But one or two colors maximum, the rest is a neutral background. A wall with emerald paint receives golden flexible moldings forming organic wavy frames. Or a burgundy wall with asymmetrically placed polyurethane overlays of botanical motifs, painted gold.
Neo-modern requires boldness and precision in execution. Flexible moldings are 40-60% more expensive than straight ones, but the effect is unique. Asymmetry requires impeccable compositional sense—a mistake turns a design solution into chaos. But for those tired of right angles and symmetrical schemes, neo-modern is a breath of fresh air.
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Minimalism: Purity of Lines and Absence of Decor
The opposite of neo-modern, minimalism rejects visible decor. Walls are smooth painted surfaces without moldings, overlays, or relief. Ceilings are stretch or painted without cornices. Baseboards are minimal height, 40-50 mm, with hidden mounting, painted the same color as the wall for visual dissolution.
But absolute minimalism is cold. A compromise is shadow lines. Instead of a cornice along the ceiling perimeter, a niche 30-50 mm deep is created, concealing an LED strip. The ceiling visually floats, not touching the walls. Instead of a baseboard, a shadow gap of 10-15 mm between the floor and wall, also with lighting. The wall seems detached from the floor.
Minimalism is cheap in materials—paint, drywall for niches, LED strips. But expensive in execution—perfect leveling of all surfaces is required. The slightest unevenness is visible on a smooth painted wall. Shadow gaps must be perfectly even along their entire length. This requires highly skilled workers.
Eclecticism: A Mix of Styles Within Taste
Eclecticism allows combining the uncombinable, but within the bounds of taste and measure. Classical stucco on the ceiling with modern slatted walls. Baroque gilded frames with minimalist furniture. Vintage moldings with modern LED fixtures.
The danger of eclecticism is sliding into kitsch, where everything is bright, heterogeneous, and loud. The rule: one style dominates, others are present as accents. 70% of the interior is neoclassicism, 20% minimalist elements, 10% baroque details. This is harmonious. 40% classic, 30% baroque, 30% loft—chaos.
Eclecticism allows for saving and experimenting. Expensive elements of one style are combined with budget ones from another. A carved oak overlay for 5000 rubles against a background of simple polyurethane moldings for 300 rubles per meter. The overlay creates an accent, the moldings create structure. The overall effect is cohesive, the cost is moderate.
Organic and Eco: Natural Materials and Textures
The trend towards eco-friendliness and connection with nature is strengthening. Wooden slats creating textured panels on walls. Wall panels made of solid oak or ash. Natural colors—sandy, terracotta, olive, wood tones. Rejection of synthetic gloss in favor of matte oil finishes.
Wall cladding in an apartmentAn interior with natural materials is perceived as expensive. But smart combining reduces costs. One accent wall of wooden slats with the others painted. Wooden baseboards and architraves with polyurethane cornices. Natural material where hands and eyes touch it, synthetic where its function is purely visual.
Anatomy of Cost: What Makes Up the Price of Renovation
Decorative wall finishing priceThe figure that scares in the estimate becomes clearer when broken down into components. The cost consists of materials and labor, and the proportion depends on complexity.
Materials: Range from Economy to Premium
Polyurethane moldings are the budget foundation of decorativeness. A linear meter of molding 60 mm wide costs 250-400 rubles depending on profile complexity. A cornice 100 mm wide—400-600 rubles per meter. A rosette 50 cm in diameter—1200-2500 rubles. An overlay 20×30 cm in size—400-800 rubles.
MDF for painting — mid-range segment. 80 mm high skirting board — 300-450 rubles per meter. 100 mm wide cornice — 500-700 rubles. Panels for creating boiserie — 1500-2500 rubles per square meter. 20×40 mm section battens — 150-250 rubles per meter.
Solid wood — premium. 100 mm high oak skirting board — 1200-1800 rubles per meter. Oak cornice — 1500-2500 rubles per meter. Solid oak panels — 8000-15000 rubles per square meter. Hand-carved overlays — 3000-12000 rubles per piece depending on size and complexity.
Paint, glue, primer — consumables, but also affect the cost. High-quality acrylic paint — 500-800 rubles per liter. Primer — 300-500 rubles per liter. Polyurethane mounting adhesive — 400-600 rubles per tube, enough for 5-7 meters of cornice. Joint filler — 200-400 rubles per kilogram.
Labor: qualification determines the cost
Simple operations — wall painting, installation of straight cornices and skirting boards — cost 200-400 rubles per square meter or linear meter. This is medium-skill work, feasible by a general construction crew.
Complex operations — creating molding compositions, installing boiserie, mounting carved elements — cost 500-1200 rubles per meter or element. Requires high precision, understanding of composition, experience with specific materials. This is the work of specialized decorator craftsmen.
Artistic operations — patination, gilding, painting — cost from 1000 rubles per square meter or element. This is manual work requiring artistic education and years of experience.
The ratio of material cost to labor cost is approximately 40/60 for simple solutions and 60/40 for complex ones. Installation of a polyurethane cornice: material 5000 rubles, labor 7000 rubles per room. Installation of carved oak boiserie: material 300000 rubles, labor 200000 rubles per room. The more complex the material, the higher its share in the total cost.
Hidden costs: what is often forgotten
Surface preparation — often not included in the initial estimate, but critical. Uneven walls require leveling with plaster or drywall — 400-800 rubles per square meter including materials and labor. Uneven ceiling — stretch ceiling 500-800 rubles per meter or leveling — 600-900 rubles per meter. Crooked corners require rework — 500-1000 rubles per corner.
Demolition of old finishes — if the apartment is not a new build. Wallpaper removal — 50-150 rubles per meter. Removal of old skirting boards and cornices — 50-100 rubles per meter. Paint removal — 150-300 rubles per meter. Debris removal — 3000-8000 rubles depending on volume.
Material delivery — especially for large-sized elements. Delivery within Moscow 3000-5000 rubles, within Moscow region 5000-10000 rubles, to regions by transport company 150-250 rubles per kilogram. Polyurethane is light but bulky — 2-meter long cornices take up a lot of space.
Unforeseen expenses — always budget 10-15% of the estimate. Material shortage due to calculation errors, damage to elements during installation, need to purchase additional tools — the unexpected always happens.
Molding products: economical framework of the interior
Moldings made of polyurethane— the workhorse of decorative finishing. Lightweight, inexpensive, diverse in profiles, paintable in any color, mountable with adhesive without professional skills.
Creating structure with molding frames
An empty painted wall is boring. Frames made of moldings turn it into a structured surface. Vertical and horizontal moldings with a section of 40×15 mm or 60×20 mm form rectangles sized 50×70 cm or 60×90 cm. Frames are placed symmetrically — two per wall or three depending on wall size.
Inside the frames, the wall is painted the same color or a contrasting one. Monochromatic painting creates a delicate relief visible in side light. Contrasting — graphic expressiveness. Wallpaper or fabric inserts inside frames — a classic technique for a rich interior.
Cost of molding frames for a 3×2.5 meter wall: moldings 20 meters at 300 rubles — 6000 rubles, adhesive and filler — 1000 rubles, paint 2 liters — 1200 rubles, labor 20 meters at 250 rubles — 5000 rubles. Total 13200 rubles for transforming a wall.
Ceiling cornice: visually raising the height
A cornice around the ceiling perimeter — a basic element without which the interior looks unfinished. Cornice width is critical. For standard apartments with a 2.7-meter ceiling, a 70-90 mm cornice is optimal. Narrower gets lost, wider visually weighs down.
Painting the cornice the same color as the walls visually raises the ceiling by 5-10 cm. The wall continues all the way up, the ceiling appears to float. Painting the same color as the ceiling — a traditional solution, the cornice is perceived as part of the ceiling plane. Contrasting painting — a dark cornice with a light ceiling — works as a graphic border.
Cost of a cornice for a 4×4 meter room (perimeter 16 meters): cornice 16 meters at 450 rubles — 7200 rubles, adhesive — 1500 rubles, filler — 500 rubles, paint — 800 rubles, labor 16 meters at 300 rubles — 4800 rubles. Total 14800 rubles.
Skirting boards: framing the floor
A skirting board is not a technical detail, but an architectural element affecting the perception of proportions. A 70-80 mm high skirting board in a standard apartment creates a visual foundation without overloading the space. Skirting board color — continuation of the floor, continuation of the wall, or contrast — is chosen based on the concept.
Polyurethane skirting board is 3-4 times cheaper than wooden, easier to install. For rooms where the skirting board is not subject to mechanical loads — bedroom, living room — polyurethane is optimal. For the hallway, where shoe impacts are possible, wood or MDF is better.
Cost of skirting board for a 4×4 meter room (perimeter 16 meters): polyurethane skirting board 16 meters at 350 rubles — 5600 rubles, adhesive — 1200 rubles, filler — 400 rubles, paint — 600 rubles, labor 16 meters at 200 rubles — 3200 rubles. Total 11000 rubles.
Comprehensive approach: cornice + moldings + skirting board
Individual elements work, but a complex creates integrity. The room gets framing — skirting board at the bottom, cornice at the top, molding compositions on the walls. All elements are polyurethane, painted in coordinated colors.
Total cost of decorative finishing for a 16 square meter room with polyurethane elements: cornice 14800 rubles, skirting board 11000 rubles, molding frames on two walls 26400 rubles, ceiling rosette 3500 rubles with installation. Total 55700 rubles. This transforms a standard room into an elegant space for reasonable money.
The Apartment Question: Specifics of Standard Layouts
A standard apartment is not a private house with high ceilings and spacious rooms. It features ceilings of 2.5-2.7 meters, rooms of 12-18 square meters, combined bathrooms, and a lack of isolated rooms. Decorative finishing must account for these limitations.
Low Ceilings: Visually Increasing Height
A 2.5-meter ceiling is the minimum for comfort but can feel psychologically oppressive. It can be visually raised using several techniques. A cornice painted the same color as the walls extends the vertical line to the very top. Vertical moldings or battens on the walls draw the eye upward. A light ceiling with darker walls creates a sense of distance.
A wide cornice with a low ceiling is risky—it visually reduces height. For a 2.5-meter ceiling, the maximum cornice width is 60-70 mm. A wider one will create a feeling that the ceiling is looming.
Baseboards with a low ceiling should also be moderate—60-70 mm. A tall baseboard visually shortens the wall, which is critical with a low ceiling.
Small Areas: Zoning Without Partitions
A 12-15 square meter room serving as both a bedroom and a study requires zoning without physical partitions. Molding frames on the wall behind the bed delineate the sleeping area. Vertical battens spaced 100 mm apart on the opposite wall delineate the work area with a desk.
Color zoning enhances the effect. The sleeping area is painted a calming lavender, the work area—an invigorating mint. The moldings and battens are painted a neutral gray, linking the zones.
Cost of zoning a 12-square-meter room: molding frame on the wall behind the bed 8000 rubles, battens on the opposite wall 12000 rubles, an additional 3 liters of paint for color zoning 2400 rubles. Total 22400 rubles for functional separation without losing square meters.
Studio Apartments: Accent Walls and Visual Boundaries
A 35-40 square meter studio without internal walls requires clear zoning. Kitchen, living room, bedroom in one space—they need to be visually demarcated. An accent wall with molding compositions in the sofa area marks the living room. A batten structure between the living room and bedroom creates a semi-transparent boundary without blocking light and air.
Ceiling zoning enhances the effect. Different ceiling levels over different zones, different cornices—a wide profiled one over the living room, a narrow straight one over the kitchen. This creates a visual open-space structure.
Cost of zoning a 40-square-meter studio: accent wall in the living room with moldings 25000 rubles, batten partition between living room and bedroom 35000 rubles, multi-level cornices around the entire perimeter 22000 rubles. Total 82000 rubles for turning one room into a structured living space.
Khrushchyovka Apartments: Maximum Effect with Minimum Funds
A Khrushchyovka—small rooms, low ceilings of 2.48 meters, crooked walls and corners. The renovation budget is limited—there's no point in investing large sums in housing with a limited lifespan. But one still wants to live beautifully.
The solution is accent decorativeness. One wall in the living room gets molding frames, the others are simply painted. Cornices only in the living room and bedroom, in the kitchen and hallway—none. Inexpensive polyurethane baseboards, painted the color of the walls for visual dissolution.
Cost of decorative finishing for a two-room Khrushchyovka: accent wall in the living room 9000 rubles, cornices in two rooms 18000 rubles, baseboards throughout the apartment 15000 rubles. Total 42000 rubles for a noticeable improvement in aesthetics while preserving the budget.
Balance: The Art of Compromise Between Dream and Reality
A perfect magazine-style interior costs 3-5 million rubles per room. Your budget is 300-500 thousand for the entire apartment. A chasm? No, if you understand what creates the visual impression and what is secondary.
The 80/20 Rule in Decorative Finishing
80% of the visual effect is created by 20% of the elements. Find these 20% and invest your main funds in them. The remaining 80% of elements can be budget-friendly—their role is auxiliary.
What falls into the critical 20%: an accent wall in the main room, a ceiling cornice in the main room, floor baseboards throughout the apartment, door casings. These elements are constantly visible and form the first impression.
What can be budget-friendly: cornices in secondary rooms, moldings in hallways and utility rooms, decorative overlays where they don't attract attention. The saved funds are directed to the critical elements.
Phased Implementation: Stretch Over Time
Can't do everything at once? Break it into phases. First phase—basic finishing: leveling, painting, simple baseboards. The apartment is livable and looks neat. Cost: 200-300 thousand for a 50-square-meter apartment.
Second phase in six months to a year—adding cornices in the main rooms, creating an accent wall with moldings. Cost: 80-120 thousand. The visual quality of the interior sharply increases.
Third phase in one to one and a half years—additional decorative elements, replacing simple baseboards with more expressive ones in formal areas. Cost: 60-100 thousand. The interior acquires completeness.
Total cost 340-520 thousand, but spread over 2-2.5 years, making it psychologically and financially manageable.
DIY Approach: Saving on Labor
Installing simple elements—cornices, baseboards, straight moldings—is accessible to someone without construction experience. You'll need a handsaw or jigsaw for cutting, a miter box for trimming corners, mounting adhesive, putty, and paint.
Savings on labor when installing yourself amount to 40-60% of the cost. A cornice priced at 14,800 rubles with installation will cost 10,000 rubles if installed yourself (materials + adhesive + paint). Baseboard drops from 11,000 to 7,800. For an apartment, savings are 50-80 thousand rubles.
Time investment – a weekend per room. Installing crown molding around the perimeter of a room takes 4-6 hours with mitered corners. Baseboards take 3-4 hours. Picture frame molding takes 6-8 hours. The weekend isn't wasted; it's turned into real savings.
Combining materials: expensive and budget
All solid oak—beautiful, but unaffordable. All polyurethane—affordable, but can look cheap. A combination creates balance. Wooden baseboards—they're touched, seen up close, material is critical. Polyurethane cornices—they're near the ceiling, no one touches them, material is less important. Moldings on an accent wall are wooden, on others—polyurethane.
Such combination reduces cost by 40-50% compared to a fully wooden solution, preserving 80% of the visual effect. Tactile contact with quality materials where it matters, visual perception is supplemented with budget materials.
Investing in durability: calculating over decades
A cheap renovation requires updating every 5-7 years. A quality one lasts 20-30 years without intervention. Which is more cost-effective?
Durability arithmetic
A room painted with budget paint at 250 rubles per liter. After 5 years, the paint fades, stains appear, requiring renewal. Over 25 years—5 repaints. Paint cost: 5×3 liters×250 = 3,750 rubles. Labor: 5×8,000 = 40,000 rubles. Total: 43,750 rubles.
A room painted with premium paint at 800 rubles per liter. Paint holds color for 12-15 years. Over 25 years—2 repaints. Paint cost: 2×3 liters×800 = 4,800 rubles. Labor: 2×8,000 = 16,000 rubles. Total: 20,800 rubles.
Savings with expensive paint: 22,950 rubles over 25 years for one room. For a three-room apartment—savings of 68,850 rubles. Plus saved time and nerves from four avoided renovations.
Polyurethane vs. plaster
Gypsum stucco is cheaper to buy—molding 150-200 rubles per meter vs. 300-400 for polyurethane. But gypsum is fragile, often breaks during transport and installation. Losses of 15-20% are inevitable—factor this into calculations. Polyurethane practically doesn't break.
Gypsum is heavy—requires mechanical fastening with screws, complicating installation and increasing its cost. Polyurethane is glued—installation is simpler and cheaper by 30-40%.
Gypsum absorbs moisture—in rooms with humidity above 60%, it can mold, requiring protective coating. Polyurethane is moisture-resistant, suitable for bathrooms and kitchens without additional protection.
Over 20 years of use, gypsum stucco may require repair or replacement of damaged sections—10-15% of the cost. Polyurethane lasts without intervention. Initial savings on gypsum turn into additional expenses.
Solid wood vs. MDF
MDF baseboard costs 300 rubles per meter, lasts 10-15 years, then requires replacement due to coating wear or mechanical damage. Oak baseboard costs 1,200 rubles per meter, lasts 50+ years with practically no wear.
Over 50 years, MDF baseboard will need replacing 3-4 times. 4×300 = 1,200 rubles per meter for material, plus 4×150 = 600 rubles for installation. Total: 1,800 rubles per meter. Oak: 1,200 rubles once. Savings: 600 rubles per meter; for an apartment with an 80-meter perimeter—48,000 rubles over half a century.
But there's a nuance—inflation. 1,200 rubles now are equivalent to 300 rubles 12-15 years ago with 5% annual inflation. Investing in durable materials protects against inflation—you pay with today's money for 50 years of service, avoiding repeat purchases at future prices.
Psychological value of stability
Frequent renovations are stressful. Disruption of familiar surroundings, temporary inconveniences, financial expenses, the need to make decisions. Quality finishing that doesn't require intervention for decades creates psychological comfort of stability.
Getting used to an interior, forming an emotional connection with a space is only possible with its stability. An interior changing every 5 years doesn't become a home. An interior serving 20-30 years absorbs family history, becomes the backdrop for significant events.
This value cannot be expressed in rubles, but it is real and important for quality of life.
Frequently asked questions
What is the average cost of decorative finishing for a 50-square-meter apartment?
Budget option with polyurethane elements—150-250 thousand rubles turnkey. Mid-range option with a combination of polyurethane and MDF—300-500 thousand. Premium with wooden elements and complex compositions—700-1,200 thousand. Prices include materials and labor, but without surface preparation and removal of old finishes.
Can beautiful finishing be done for 100 thousand for the entire apartment?
Yes, with self-installation and focusing on the essentials. Polyurethane cornices in two main rooms, baseboards throughout the apartment, one accent wall with moldings. The rest—simply quality painting. Visually, it will look decent but without excess.
What is more durable—polyurethane or wood?
In dry rooms with normal humidity, wood is more durable—50+ years vs. 20-30 for polyurethane. In humid rooms, polyurethane is preferable—doesn't rot, doesn't warp. Mechanical strength is higher for wood—withstands impacts; polyurethane may crack.
Does it make sense to use expensive materials in a rental apartment?
No, if you're living there temporarily. The landlord won't appreciate your investment, and you won't get anything back when you move. Use budget-friendly solutions that you can leave without regret. If you plan to buy the apartment — then invest in quality.
How to check the quality of polyurethane moldings before purchase?
Visual inspection — surface is smooth without bubbles, pits, or unevenness. Clarity of relief — small details of the ornament are well-defined. Geometry — the molding is straight, not bent. Weight — quality polyurethane is dense and heavy. Cheap — lightweight and porous. Smell — a faint specific odor is acceptable, a sharp chemical smell is a sign of low-quality raw materials.
How long does decorative finishing of a 15-square-meter room take?
With professional installation — 3-5 working days. Preparation 1 day, installation of cornice and baseboard 1 day, creation of molding composition 1-2 days, painting elements 1-2 days accounting for drying time between coats. DIY without experience — 3-4 weekends.
Can polyurethane molding be painted in dark colors?
Yes, and it should be, if the concept requires it. Polyurethane holds any paint excellently — acrylic, latex, oil-based. For dark colors, 2-3 coats of paint will be needed for even coverage. It's important to prime well before painting.
After how many years do polyurethane elements need to be refreshed?
With quality installation and painting — 15-20 years without refreshing. If you want to freshen up — you can repaint at any time. The polyurethane itself lasts 25-30 years, after which it may require replacement due to accumulated micro-damage.
Aesthetics without bankruptcy
A beautiful interior is not a privilege of the rich. It is the result of sensible decisions, where understanding the principles of visual perception, knowledge of materials, and smart budget allocation create harmony between aesthetics and economy.
The company STAVROS provides tools to create such a balance. A wide range of polyurethane millwork products allows for implementing decorative concepts from classic to modern on reasonable budgets. Moldings of all profiles and sizes, cornices from minimalist to richly ornamented, baseboards from 50 to 150 mm in height, overlays and rosettes in hundreds of designs.
A parallel assortment of MDF and solid wood provides the opportunity to combine materials, using each where its advantages are maximized. Polyurethane cornices near the ceiling, wooden baseboards near the floor. Polyurethane moldings on secondary walls, wooden slats on the accent wall. A sensible combination reduces costs without losing quality.
STAVROS's production facilities ensure consistent quality at competitive prices. In-house polyurethane casting from European raw materials guarantees material density, clarity of relief, and resistance to deformation. Woodworking shops produce millwork from solid oak, beech, and ash with precise geometry and quality drying.
Warehouse stock in Moscow and St. Petersburg ensures immediate availability of popular items. Most moldings and cornices are shipped on the day of order. Non-standard sizes and custom profiles are manufactured to order with a lead time of 7-14 days.
Technical support helps optimize solutions for a specific budget. STAVROS specialists will advise on how to achieve the desired visual effect with minimal costs, which elements are critical, which can be simplified, and how to allocate the budget between materials and labor.
Installation crews perform turnkey installation in Moscow, St. Petersburg, and regions of presence. Transparent pricing, fixed deadlines, work guarantee. An alternative — detailed instructions for DIY installation for those willing to save by doing it themselves.
Create interiors where aesthetics do not conflict with calculation, but complement it. Where every ruble is invested wisely, creating maximum visual effect with minimum cost. Where beauty serves for decades, justifying the investment with durability. STAVROS is a partner in creating such interiors, providing materials, knowledge, and support at all stages from selection to operation.