Thrive Interior Design

Thrive Interior Design Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Thrive Interior Design, Interior design studio, 5-2161 Evergreen Road, Campbell River, BC.

Understanding your Sensory Profile is the key to getting the perfect design for your nervous system.  At Thrive we know ...
02/14/2026

Understanding your Sensory Profile is the key to getting the perfect design for your nervous system. At Thrive we know that many homes have mixed sensory needs and using Thrive's Sensory Design Framework we are able to create homes that are beautiful, functional and calm for everyone.

At Thrive Interior Design we want to support calm, beauty and function in your spaces.  I've developed a sensory based d...
02/14/2026

At Thrive Interior Design we want to support calm, beauty and function in your spaces. I've developed a sensory based design framework that does just that. There are 4 main sensory types that drive design needs. Use this link https://sensorydesignquiz.abacusai.app/ or Scan the QR code below to find out yours.

02/14/2026
❌ Magazine design  ≠ sensory aware design This room is beautiful.Balanced. Cohesive. Magazine-worthy.And yet—it’s not go...
01/25/2026

❌ Magazine design ≠ sensory aware design

This room is beautiful.
Balanced. Cohesive. Magazine-worthy.

And yet—it’s not good sensory design.

Why?

Because good sensory design isn’t about how a space looks at first glance. It’s about how your body feels after being in it for hours.

In this space:
• Overhead lighting keeps the nervous system alert, even when it’s “well balanced”
• The open concept asks your brain to process everything at once—no refuge, no containment
• Polished surfaces reflect light and sound, increasing sensory load over time
• Visual calm exists, but sensory quiet does not
• There’s no true anchor point that tells the body it’s safe to fully exhale

So people say:
“It’s gorgeous… I just don’t totally relax here.”

And they’re right.

This room is designed to be seen.
Sensory-aware design is designed to be felt.

That distinction is where real calm lives—and it’s what most homes are missing.

A great example of what Visual Noise looks like.  It is one of the pillars of sensory aware design and can silently rob ...
01/19/2026

A great example of what Visual Noise looks like. It is one of the pillars of sensory aware design and can silently rob your nervous system of energy leaving you fatigued with no understanding of why.

Why my design work starts with the nervous systemBefore interior design, I worked in forestry.In forestry, hierarchy is ...
01/19/2026

Why my design work starts with the nervous system

Before interior design, I worked in forestry.

In forestry, hierarchy is non-negotiable.
You don’t start with what looks good.
You start with what everything else depends on.

Soil.
Water.
Light.
Disturbance.
Time.

If the base conditions are wrong, nothing above them succeeds—no matter how carefully planned.

That same mistake happens constantly in interior design.

Most spaces are designed from the top down:
style → furniture → finishes
with little attention paid to how the environment is actually processed by the human nervous system.

My sensory-aware design framework flips that.

It is built on a sensory design hierarchy:
Visual load — contrast, pattern, focal demand
Movement, predictability & flow — how the body navigates the space
Light quality and glare
Sound and Acoustics
Material response — texture, reflectivity, absorption
Biophilic elements - well thought out ways to incorporate nature
Aesthetic expression — style, color, personality

When this order is respected, spaces feel calm, clear, and supportive.
When it isn’t, people feel unsettled—often without knowing why.

This isn’t about preference or trend.
It’s about conditions.

Just like landscapes, interiors are systems.
And humans are not separate from them.

Good design isn’t decorative.
It’s ecological.

Another great kitchen concept with a creamy vibe.  This strong patterned countertop is perfectly balanced by the cream a...
01/10/2026

Another great kitchen concept with a creamy vibe. This strong patterned countertop is perfectly balanced by the cream and taupe cabinets, antique copper pendant lights and coordinating cream backsplash. The colour palate is complimented by wood floors for a biophilic finish.

Love this cozy, calm coastal kitchen concept.  Sensory aware design with a hood fan that provides a focal point without ...
01/10/2026

Love this cozy, calm coastal kitchen concept. Sensory aware design with a hood fan that provides a focal point without overpowering. Shaded pendant lights to avoid glare and a great coastal blue to anchor the island and give the backsplash some punch!

Calm is not a luxury; it is a design strategy.  When a space supports the nervous system daily life feels easier. Decisi...
01/09/2026

Calm is not a luxury; it is a design strategy.
When a space supports the nervous system daily life feels easier. Decisions require less energy.
Space is made for connection, creativity and rest

01/09/2026

The trend for 2026 is design that supports calm, clarity and regulation. At Thrive we start our design process with a sensory profile that allows us to build your individual style based on the needs of your nervous system. We believe that great design supports human wellbeing.

01/09/2026

The trend for 2026 is design that supports calm, clarity and regulation.

Address

5-2161 Evergreen Road
Campbell River, BC
V9W0B1

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