When your natural stone has lost its lustre, has become damaged in some other way, or needs protection, who do you look to? Do you look to your natural stone cleaning or janitorial company? Or should you be looking elsewhere?
The fact is natural stone restoration and maintenance, from chip and crack repair to deep stone cleaning and sealing to honing and polishing, requires specialised knowledge, training, and equipment, and it is important to find the right service provider.
Stone Restoration Pro Vs. Cleaning Company
Residential and commercial property owners and managers are often “up-sold” specialised services for natural stone by unqualified janitorial services and carpet cleaning companies. Specialised nature stone cleaning services for marble, granite, travertine, and other natural stone on floors, countertops, walls, and natural stone surfaces fall outside of the realm of expertise of regular stone cleaning crews. Here is what sets properly trained and qualified stone restoration contractors apart from well-intentioned but misguided stone cleaning and janitorial services.
Specialised Knowledge
The properties of natural stone vary from one stone to the next. Contractors need to have a solid understanding of the properties unique to each type of stone. For example, let’s have a look at granite. It is much harder than marble. When it becomes dull or scratched and needs to be refinished, there is a greater level of difficulty and special equipment necessary to get the job done right compared to marble refinishing. In fact, some stone restoration contractors who restore marble all day long, every day, refuse to work with granite because they know they would be getting in over their heads.
Granite and marble are just two types of stone, each with unique properties and restoration cleaning methods, but there are many more examples. Unless a janitorial or cleaning service has been specially trained, they are simply not equipped to understand, let alone resolve, the problems of all the different types of stone.
Specialised Training
Just as contractors need to have a solid understanding of the properties unique to each type of stone, they also need the skills necessary to work with each type. For example, consider travertine. It has naturally occurring holes. When the travertine is installed, these holes are often filled and finished for a uniform appearance. With traffic and use, the fillers eventually loosen or fall out. To resolve the problem, stone restoration contractors mix tints with fillers that blend with the appearance of the surrounding stone and use a professional stone cleaning process called “floating” to apply the filling material evenly. This process is then followed by honing and polishing with diamond-impregnated pads in a series of progressively finer grits to achieve the desired travertine finish, which may be anything from a soft matte to a high gloss finish or something in between. Much training and practice are necessary to perfect the accurate diagnosis of stone problems and implement the proper repair and restoration procedures.
Specialised Equipment
What might you find in the back of a stone restoration contractor’s work van? You might find cup wheels and diamond-impregnated pads to mount on hand tools and floor machines for grinding, honing, and polishing, steel wool and hogs hair polishing pads, gloss meters, moisture detectors, polishing compounds, poulticing materials, sealers, grout colour sealers, colour enhancing sealers, and other items that would leave most janitors and cleaning companies scratching their heads.
In contrast, regular cleaning and janitorial crews use vacuum cleaners, squeegees, sponges and rags, mops, spray bottles, cleaning solutions, paper towels, strippers and waxes, and often, a floor cleaning or buffing machine.
Although you are likely to find items used by cleaning and janitorial companies in the back of a work van of qualified stone restoration contractors, it is highly unlikely that you would find the equipment of a stone restoration contractor in a janitor’s or cleaning company stone restoration professional arsenal.
Allowing anyone that is less than specially trained and experienced to resolve problems with natural stone is a risk. It is not worth saving a few bucks if you end up with serious or even permanent damage to your stone. Have peace of mind by leaving your natural stone in the hands of an expert stone restoration contractor instead.
This is one of a series of articles written and published on behalf of surpHaces Partners.