There’s also a clear intention to spotlight local talent. Handwoven tapestries by Edmonton textile artist Jessica Kyca hang prominently on walls, and a local woodworker has been brought in-house to help craft pieces for the Trove furniture line. That ethos continues downstairs at Bar Trove, where the ivory-glazed ceramic charcuterie boards, rippled like draped fabric, were commissioned by Trove and handmade in Calgary. Bar Trove doubles as a showroom: selected plates and glassware, and even the house olive oil, are sold in their retail space across the corridor so that guests can buy the very items they experience in the bar.
Cozy and intimate, Bar Trove is smaller than you’d expect and feels like a secret New York lounge that might require a password to get in. The interior — with its floral-upholstered couches, panelled wood walls and show-stopping deep rouge fireplace (newly built, but convincingly vintage) — mixes the palette and ornateness of a Parisian salon with the brooding richness of a British drawing room. The effect is indulgent, transportive, yet grounded in the historical space it inhabits.
At the heart of the room is a dramatic bar with a custom base by Edmonton’s Forge 53, wrapped in marble veined with blush and gold and flanked by brass shelves. And just when you think the design details are the main event — enter the menu.
With food curated by chef Eric Hanson, formerly of The Marc, the seafood-focused menu rotates with party-ready fare, like freshly shucked oysters and a decadent lobster linguini that also appears in Kyle McDavid’s debut cookbook — one more in a growing list of entrepreneurial ventures.
Five Businesses, But Who’s Counting
As we climb the staircase, original to the building and solid with every step, Kyle McDavid warns me: “My office is still a little bit of a construction zone.”
She isn’t kidding. As we walk into the third-floor Kyle and Co. headquarters, it’s all hustle: meetings in progress, boxes to unpack, decisions to make and employee questions flying her way (she employs 21 full-time staff across her ventures, plus contractors). Lenard — the McDavids’ Instagram-famous dog — patters around beneath a bank of desks stacked with Macs and moodboards. The space hums with the kind of startup energy instantly recognizable to anyone who’s worked in early-stage businesses.