Hear from Our Customers
You stop noticing the dull spots every time you walk through your entryway. The etching from water glasses and spills disappears completely, not just temporarily.
Your marble becomes the focal point again instead of something you’re embarrassed about when guests visit. High-traffic areas that looked worn down now match the rest of your floor.
Professional marble floor polishing in Rose Hill, NY also makes daily maintenance easier. Sealed, polished surfaces resist staining and don’t grab onto dirt the way damaged marble does. You’re not scrubbing or worrying about every spill anymore.
The reflectivity comes back. That’s what most people notice first after we finish their marble actually reflects light again like it did originally.
NYC Stone Care has worked on marble floors, countertops, and surfaces across Rose Hill for nearly two decades. We’re a family-owned company, not a cleaning service that dabbles in stone.
Our lead craftsman has over 40 years of experience in natural stone restoration. That matters because marble polishing isn’t something you learn from a weekend training it takes years to understand how different marble types respond to abrasives and how to avoid causing more damage.
We’ve restored marble in Rose Hill’s luxury condos, historic co-ops, and townhouses between Gramercy and Murray Hill. The neighborhood’s mix of classic and modern buildings means we work with everything from original 1920s marble to contemporary installations. We know what your marble should look like, and we know how to get it there.
We start by assessing your marble’s current condition. Not all damage requires the same approach etching needs different treatment than scratching or general dullness.
For most marble surface polishing in Rose Hill, NY, we use diamond abrasive grinding. This removes a microscopic layer of stone to eliminate surface damage and reproduce the original factory finish. We’re not coating or covering anything up we’re actually restoring the stone itself.
The process involves multiple passes with progressively finer abrasives. Coarser grits remove scratches and etching. Finer grits bring out the polish and reflectivity. Each pass is carefully controlled to avoid removing more material than necessary.
After polishing, we typically apply a penetrating sealer. This protects against future staining and etching without changing how your marble looks. The sealer soaks into the stone rather than sitting on top like a coating.
Most residential marble polishing jobs in Rose Hill take one to two days depending on square footage and damage severity. We contain dust, protect surrounding areas, and leave your space clean when we’re done.
Ready to get started?
You get a complete assessment of your marble’s condition before we start. We identify what’s causing the dullness or damage and explain exactly what we’ll do to fix it.
The actual marble polishing and sealing in Rose Hill, NY includes diamond grinding at multiple grit levels, professional-grade polishing compounds, and penetrating sealers designed specifically for marble. We don’t use the same products you’d find at a hardware store our materials are commercial-grade and designed for permanent restoration.
Rose Hill’s density means most properties deal with heavy foot traffic. Tracked-in soil and street salt are particularly hard on marble floors in this neighborhood. Our stone polishing service addresses that accumulated damage, not just surface dirt.
We also handle repairs if needed. Small chips, cracks, or missing pieces can be filled and blended before polishing so they become nearly invisible. That’s particularly relevant in Rose Hill’s older buildings where marble has been in place for decades.
After we finish, you get specific maintenance instructions. Knowing what products to use (and avoid) makes a significant difference in how long your marble stays looking good.
Professionally polished marble in Rose Hill typically stays in good condition for three to five years in residential settings, sometimes longer if you’re careful about maintenance. High-traffic entryways might show wear sooner than less-used areas.
The longevity depends heavily on what’s walking across your floor. Rose Hill’s urban environment means people track in more abrasive material than suburban areas sidewalk grit, construction dust, salt in winter. All of that scratches marble over time.
Your maintenance habits matter too. Using pH-neutral cleaners instead of acidic products, placing mats at entrances, and addressing spills quickly all extend the time between professional polishing. We’ve seen well-maintained marble in Rose Hill co-ops go seven or eight years before needing a full restoration.
Yes, but it depends on the severity. Light etching from a single incident like a lemon slice or wine spill can often be spot-treated with honing and polishing just that area. We blend the repair into the surrounding marble so you can’t tell where we worked.
Deep etching or multiple damaged areas usually require refinishing the entire surface. Trying to spot-fix extensive damage creates an uneven appearance because the repaired sections look different from the surrounding stone.
Marble countertops in Rose Hill kitchens see a lot of acidic exposure coffee, wine, citrus, vinegar-based cleaners. If your countertop has widespread dullness rather than isolated spots, full refinishing gives you better results than patchwork repairs. The process is the same as floor polishing but adapted for horizontal surfaces that get more direct contact with damaging substances.
Cleaning removes dirt and grime from the surface. Polishing actually restores the stone itself by removing damaged material and recreating the factory finish. They’re completely different processes requiring different equipment and expertise.
Most cleaning companies use mops, pH cleaners, and maybe a buffer with a soft pad. That’s fine for maintenance but does nothing for etching, scratches, or loss of shine. Some cleaning services claim they can polish marble but use harsh chemicals or improper abrasives that cause more damage.
Professional stone polishing involves diamond abrasives, wet grinding equipment, and specialized compounds. We’re removing microscopic layers of stone in a controlled way too aggressive and you damage the marble, too gentle and you don’t fix anything. That’s why this work requires years of training, not just cleaning experience.
You can’t clean your way out of etched or scratched marble. Once the stone surface is damaged, only proper restoration fixes it.
Most marble floor polishing in Rose Hill runs between $10 and $25 per square foot depending on the condition of your marble and what needs to be done. A typical 200-square-foot entryway would cost $2,000 to $5,000 for complete restoration including sealing.
Heavy damage costs more because it requires more aggressive grinding and additional passes with different abrasives. Marble that just needs polishing and sealing costs less than marble that needs crack repairs, stain removal, and full restoration.
We give you an exact quote after seeing your marble in person. Photos help, but we need to assess the damage severity, marble type, and access considerations. Rose Hill’s mix of walk-ups and elevator buildings affects pricing carrying equipment up four flights costs more than ground-floor access.
The investment makes sense when you consider replacement costs. Removing and reinstalling marble flooring in Rose Hill would cost $40 to $100 per square foot or more. Restoration gives you the same visual result for a fraction of that price.
Yes, diamond abrasive grinding removes scratches by taking down the surrounding stone to match the depth of the scratch. We’re essentially creating a new surface that no longer has that damage.
Shallow scratches come out easily with standard polishing. Deep gouges require more aggressive grinding, which means removing more material. There’s a limit if scratches are extremely deep, we might not be able to remove them completely without compromising the marble’s integrity.
Furniture scratches are common in Rose Hill apartments, especially during move-in and move-out periods. We see this constantly in rental units and co-ops with frequent turnover. The good news is most furniture scratches aren’t as deep as they look and respond well to professional marble surface polishing.
After restoration, we recommend felt pads under all furniture legs and never dragging heavy pieces across marble. That prevents the problem from recurring after you’ve invested in fixing it.
Yes, we’re fully licensed and insured, and we provide certificates of insurance to building management before starting work. Most Rose Hill co-ops and condos require this documentation, and we handle it routinely.
We’ve worked in dozens of Rose Hill buildings over the past 15 years, so we’re familiar with the process. We coordinate with building management, schedule around resident needs, and follow building-specific requirements for service elevator use and work hours.
Some buildings require additional documentation or specific insurance limits. Let us know your building’s requirements when you contact us, and we’ll make sure everything is in order before we show up. We’ve never had a project delayed because of insurance or licensing issues.
Working in Rose Hill’s managed buildings is different from standalone properties there are more people to coordinate with and more rules to follow. We’re used to it and build that coordination time into our scheduling so your project stays on track.
Other Services we provide in Rose Hill