Western Living Magazine
Design Inspo: 6 Neutral and Serene Bedroom Retreats
Where Luxury Design Meets Premium Innovation in the Heart of the Home
2026 Kitchen Design Tip #5: Make a Modern Kitchen Feel Original With Traditional Materials
Recipe: Hopcott Farms Beef Short Ribs with Black Pepper and Sweet Soy (Sườn Bò Nướng)
Recipe: Gai Lan, Ginger and Anh and Chi’s Chilli Oil (Rau Xào Sả Ớt)
5 Scone and Biscuit Recipes to Try This Week
Tofino’s Floating Sauna Turned Me Into a Sauna Person
A Wellness Getaway in Squamish Valley: Off-Grid Yurts, Sauna Cycles and River Calm
Local Getaway Guide: A Peaceful Two-Day Itinerary for Harrison Hot Springs
Protected: Audi Elevates the Compact Luxury SUV
New and Noteworthy: 10 Fresh Home Design Finds for Winter 2026
The Best Home Accessories Our Editors Bought in 2025
Photos: The Western Living Design 25 Finalists Party
2025 Architects of the Year MA+HG On Their Favourite Things
Maker of the Year Winner Andrea Copp’s Local Favourites
The Western Canadian fine-casual chain continues their design evolution with an art-deco-meets-tiki-cool new Burnaby room.
As someone who grew up in the ‘burbs with few independent, interesting restaurants to choose from, I have spent probably years of my life total slamming back the yam fries in a big leather booth at whatever Earls, Red Robin or Milestones was closest to the mall. It’s hardly a childhood to complain about, but these were not formative dining experiences—they just were there.
As I grew up, my tastes evolved along with my options. I began to view casual-fine chain dining as a last resort, returning only when a group birthday party or a road trip I-guess-this’ll-do stopover. (Or when enticed by a particularly promising happy hour special—who is strong enough to resist the siren song of a $4 frosé?)
But what I’ve missed as I’ve been living my big-city life (and/or fighting not-infrequent frosé-induced brain freezes), is that some of these chains are starting to grow up too. They’re not just doing it to impress me, of course: it’s gotta be tough to be a chain restaurant in this age of foodie frenzy. You’re still under pressure to deliver consistency from location to location, but there’s now an expectation that every dining experience needs to be a truly unique occasion and every dining room, a draw in its own right. And Earls, at least, is taking note.
The new Station Square location isn’t the first Earls to go rogue from its cookie-cutter suburban vibe with its design: the Earls.67 in Calgary was designed in partnership with award-winning restaurant designer Craig Stanghetta; a new Ambleside location rocks a sophisticated palette of walnuts and greys. But with its beautiful, art-deco-meets-tiki-room interiors, this Burnaby room cements this new non-trend trend for the brand’s spatial design.
It’s a beaut—and a far cry from its upscale-sports-bar past. In the dining area, rich greens and camel-coloured leather banquettes provide views to the open concept kitchen. Pops of greenery and off-kilter geometric tiles throughout give a homey warmth. Vintage photography from the iconic Fred Herzog lines the walls, and a gallery wall in the dining room features local works curated by the Burnaby Arts Council. The showstopper is the full-wall mural in the bar by Burnaby-born artist Priscilla Yu, an abstract and kaleidoscopic representation of Deer Lake Park.
Alongside an extensive craft beer list and lobster tostadas, you’ll still find that good ol’ chain resto staple—yes, yam fries are still on the menu. But in a space this pretty, it doesn’t feel like settling. Pass the aioli.
Stacey is a senior editor at Western Living magazine, as well as editor-in-chief of sister publication Vancouver magazine. She loves window shopping on the job: send your home accessories and furniture recommendations over to [email protected]
Are you over 18 years of age?
Get the latest headlines delivered to your inbox 3 times a week.