
Marble is one of those surfaces that looks incredible when it's clean - and really shows its age when it's not. This bathroom in Santa Clara had a gorgeous herringbone marble floor, but years of soap residue, moisture, and everyday buildup had dulled the whole thing out. The grout lines were pulling the look down too.
Here's what we were working with: a full bathroom floor laid in a tight herringbone pattern using large marble tiles. Beautiful floor, no question. But marble is porous and sensitive, and it needs the right approach. You can't just throw a standard cleaner at it and call it a day.
We use a rotary cleaning tool specifically designed for tile and natural stone surfaces. It keeps the pressure controlled and consistent across every inch of the floor - no aggressive scrubbing that could damage the stone, no missed spots in the grout lines. It's the kind of equipment that makes a real difference on a surface like marble.
The result speaks for itself. The marble is back to showing its natural veining - those warm tones and natural movement in the stone that get completely buried under grime. The grout lines are clean and uniform again. The whole floor just looks sharp.
Marble and natural stone need more than a mop. If you've got a tile floor that's lost its edge, this is exactly the kind of work we do.