In the quiet elegance of northern Colorado, tucked just off the thoroughfare of I-25, stands a space of transformation. Not simply a showroom, not merely a studio—Element Flooring and Design Center is a living canvas for self-expression, where interiors become intimate reflections of the people who dwell within them. At its helm is Mindy Myers, a woman whose path into the design world was paved not by happenstance, but by purpose—and a touch of serendipity.
Mindy’s journey to business ownership began not with blueprints, but with a blueprint of resilience. “Someone told me once, ‘if you want to grow as an individual, start a business.’ That’s incredibly true,” she says. “You find yourself in situations where you can't just walk away and quit. You have too much invested. You have to keep moving forward.”
With a soul shaped by construction and a mind sharpened by years in finance, Mindy did more than buy a small flooring shop—she revived it. Then she acquired a second one in Denver, merging them into the dynamic, design-forward haven that Element is today.
Yet, Element is not merely a purveyor of cabinets, tiles, and textiles. It is a stylist’s sanctuary, where personal taste becomes tangible.
“We’re just going to keep doing what we’re doing,” Mindy reflects, “and continue to get better and better while increasing our offerings.” From backsplash to baseboard, every corner of a home is fair game for Element’s vision of beauty, cohesion, and identity.
More than a curator of materials, Mindy is a cultivator of meaning. She believes design is not about following trends, but about revealing a person’s truth.
“There’s something so powerful about being in creation that has no agenda,” she says of her own artistic pursuits outside of work. “I’m not doing it for money; I’m not doing it for any other purpose, other than I’m challenging myself and I’m having fun. It slows down a part of my brain to where I can just be really, really present in the moment. And when I come out of it, whatever I was worried about before just doesn’t feel that big.”
It’s that same spirit of presence that defines her leadership. Within the Element team, innovation isn’t a buzzword—it’s a philosophy. “We’re innovators, and we learn something from every single project that we do,” Mindy shares.
Each completed space is dissected with care, its lessons gathered like fine threads for the next weave of design.
But what sets Mindy apart in a saturated design world isn’t just her artistic fluency. It is her extraordinary empathy. Her presence in the community is as tactile as the surfaces she installs.
“I’m on the board of the HBA Foundation,” she explains, “and specifically, we have targeted veterans and families of veterans that have needed things where their abilities have changed suddenly.”
With compassion and craft, Mindy and her team have turned fractured spaces into safe havens. “We helped a widow of a veteran who was in a wheelchair, and a tile had broken loose so her wheels were constantly getting caught in the absence of the floor. We did a full renovation for her. We partner with our other trades in the community to donate time and materials to those in need.”
This devotion—to both design and dignity—requires endurance, and Mindy’s balance is hard-won.
“I realized a very long time ago how to change my mind frame from things like ‘life is happening to me,’ to ‘life is happening for me,’” she says. “Just because I’m not where I want to be yet, doesn’t mean that I can’t, in this moment, experience joy.”
Her grace is neither naïve nor detached, but forged from weathered days, difficult choices, and a steadfast refusal to let stress eclipse soul.
In a world obsessed with instant aesthetics, Mindy champions thoughtful design, rooted not in the latest palette, but in timeless individuality. Her work is less about decoration and more about discovery—unearthing a client’s essence and giving it texture, light, and form.
To step inside Element Flooring and Design Center is to step into possibility.
But to know Mindy Myers is to understand that true style is not simply seen—it is deeply felt. It is in the grit behind beauty, the story behind symmetry, and the service behind every surface.
“I realized a very long time ago how to change my mind frame from things like ‘life is happening to me,’ to ‘life is happening for me.’”