Countertop Installation
Countertop Installation in Westchester County, NY
We template, fabricate, and install all countertops in-house — no outsourced stone yard, no third-party scheduling. One team, end to end.
How countertop installation works
Cabinet completion
We wait until all cabinets are fully installed and level before templating. Premature templating is a common source of countertop fit problems.
Digital templating
Our team uses digital templating technology to measure your cabinet layout with pinpoint precision. The template is used to program CNC cutting.
Slab selection
If you haven't already selected your slab, we bring you to the slab yard to choose your exact piece. No two natural stone slabs are identical.
Fabrication
Your countertop is cut, edged, and finished in our fabrication shop. Edge profile, cutouts, and waterfall panels are all fabricated precisely.
Installation
Our stone team installs your countertops — typically in one day. Seams are placed in low-visibility locations and finished with color-matched epoxy.
Sealing & care
Natural stone is sealed after installation. We provide care instructions for your specific material.
Materials we install
- Quartz (Cambria, Silestone, Caesarstone, MSI)
- Quartzite (Taj Mahal, Perla Venata, Super White)
- Marble (Calacatta, Carrara, Statuario)
- Granite
- Porcelain slab (Dekton, Laminam)
- Butcher block (islands and specialty areas)
Edge profiles
Edge profile affects both appearance and safety. Common options include:
Countertop Installation FAQ
How long does countertop installation take?
Countertop installation itself takes 1–2 days once the slabs are fabricated. Fabrication takes 1–2 weeks after templating. Templating occurs after cabinets are fully installed. The full process from cabinet completion to countertop installation is typically 2–3 weeks.
Do you handle countertop removal and disposal?
Yes. We remove and dispose of existing countertops as part of the renovation process. If you have laminate, tile, or other materials, we handle complete demolition before new countertop installation.
How do I choose between quartz and quartzite?
Quartz is engineered — uniform, non-porous, no sealing required, and available in hundreds of consistent patterns. Quartzite is natural stone — each slab unique, requires annual sealing, and harder than marble. Quartzite tends to cost more and requires more maintenance.
Two Showrooms · No Appointment Necessary
Ready to Transform Your Kitchen or Bathroom?
Two showrooms. No appointment necessary. Serving Westchester County, NY and Fairfield County, CT since 2005.