Where the stone
meets the mountain.
We don't source from catalogues. Our team visits 30+ family-owned quarries across 10 countries, selects every block by hand, and maintains relationships measured in decades — not transactions.
We evaluate quarries the way
architects evaluate stone:
by what's beneath the surface.
Our sourcing footprint
country by country.
Turkey
The Anatolian plateau spans Triassic metamorphics (~230 Ma) in Afyon and Marmara Island, Miocene lacustrine deposits (~15 Ma) in Burdur and Antalya, and Pliocene-Pleistocene travertine terraces (~2 Ma) in Denizli — one of the most geologically diverse stone regions on earth.
Diamond wire for marble; chain saw and wire for limestone; diamond wire and chain saw for travertine benches.
Marble: 2.5–3.0 × 1.3–1.6 × 1.2–1.5 m, 16–22 t. Limestone: 2.4–2.8 × 1.4–1.8 × 1.2 m, 14–19 t. Travertine: 2.2–2.6 × 1.3–1.6 × 1.0–1.2 m, 12–16 t.
Marmara Island (Balıkesir), Afyonkarahisar, Burdur / Bucak, Denizli (travertine), Antalya / Elmalı, Sivas, Muğla / Yatağan, İzmir, Bilecik, Kaklık
İzmir (Alsancak), Bandırma, Antalya, Mersin — all within 150–300 km of major quarry districts.
Turkey is our home market and deepest sourcing territory. Our team is on-site at active quarries weekly.
Italy
The Apuan Alps are a Jurassic marine basin (~180 Ma) — compressed plankton skeletons metamorphosed into the world's most celebrated marble. Veneto yields Cretaceous limestone with distinctive fossil inclusions. Sicily's Miocene calcarenites (~15 Ma) produce warm Perlato di Sicilia.
Diamond wire sawing for marble blocks; chain saw cutting for limestone benches. Hand-selection at the bench face is standard practice.
Carrara marble: 2.7–3.2 × 1.3–1.6 × 1.2–1.5 m, 18–22 t. Verona / Trani limestone: 2.5–3.0 × 1.4–1.8 × 1.2 m, 15–20 t.
Carrara Basin (Tuscany), Lessini Mountains (Veneto), La Spezia (Liguria), Aosta Valley, Palermo (Sicily), Lecce / Salento (Apulia)
Carrara (direct wharf access for marble blocks), La Spezia, Savona, Venice, Palermo.
Our longest-standing partnerships — some spanning 15+ years. We visit a minimum of 4 times per year.
Greece
Greek marbles are predominantly Triassic (~230 Ma) — recrystallized carbonate platforms from the Tethys Ocean. Thassos Island produces the whitest marble in the world due to its exceptionally low iron oxide content (<0.02% Fe₂O₃).
Diamond wire extraction with helix cutting for vein-following. Open-pit bench mining at 8–12 m bench heights.
Thassos white: 2.5–3.0 × 1.2–1.5 × 1.1–1.4 m, 14–18 t. Drama / Volakas: 2.4–2.8 × 1.3–1.6 × 1.1–1.3 m, 13–17 t.
Thassos Island, Drama (Macedonia), Volos (Thessaly), Euboea (Evia), Tinos (Cyclades), Naxos, Kozani, Skyros (Sporades), Kavala, Veria
Kavala, Thessaloniki, Volos — all with dedicated block-handling facilities.
Greek white marbles are benchmarked for whiteness index (L* > 92). We reject blocks where colour deviates.
Spain
Spain's stone belts span Triassic (~230 Ma) marbles in Almería, Jurassic (~160 Ma) in Murcia, Cretaceous (~120 Ma) in the Basque Country, and Miocene (~15 Ma) calcarenites in Alicante — each producing distinctly different colour palettes.
Diamond wire for marble; chain saw and diamond wire for limestone. Deeper quarries (40–80 m benches) require multi-bench layouts.
Crema Marfil / Marrón Emperador: 2.5–2.8 × 1.3–1.6 × 1.1–1.4 m, 14–18 t. Nero Marquina: 2.4–2.7 × 1.2–1.5 × 1.1–1.3 m, 13–16 t.
Pinoso / Alicante (Crema Marfil), Markina (Nero Marquina), Murcia (Marrón Emperador), Macael (Blanco Macael), Tarragona (Gris Pulpis), Ibiza (Blanco Ibiza), Cuenca, Castellón
Alicante, Valencia, Barcelona — all within 2 hours of main quarry districts.
Crema Marfil is the highest-volume stone we move from Spain. We grade exclusively in A/B qualities.
France
French limestones range from Jurassic (~170 Ma) oolitic and shell beds in Burgundy to Cretaceous (~100 Ma) in Languedoc. The Pyrenees yield a unique Cretaceous marble (Noir des Pyrénées) from deep marine anoxic deposits.
Chain saw cutting for limestone (Pierre de Bourgogne, Massangis); diamond wire for harder marbles.
Burgundy limestone: 2.4–2.8 × 1.3–1.7 × 1.0–1.3 m, 12–17 t. French marble: 2.5–3.0 × 1.2–1.5 × 1.1–1.4 m, 14–18 t.
Saint-Pons (Languedoc), Caunes-Minervois, Comblanchien (Burgundy), Massangis (Burgundy), Sarrancolin (Pyrenees), Arudy (Pyrenees)
Marseille, Sète, Le Havre.
French limestones are specified by architects for their consistent bedding plane structure. Our Pierre de Bourgogne selection focuses on frost-resistant grades.
Portugal
The Estremoz marble belt (Alentejo) is a Cambrian-Silurian metamorphic sequence (~400 Ma) — among the oldest commercial marbles in Europe. Portuguese limestone (Moca Creme) is Cretaceous (~100 Ma) from the Lisbon region.
Diamond wire for marble — Estremoz quarries are among the deepest in Europe (60–100 m benches). Chain saw for limestone.
Estremoz marble: 2.6–3.0 × 1.3–1.6 × 1.2–1.5 m, 16–21 t. Moca Creme: 2.4–2.7 × 1.3–1.6 × 1.1–1.3 m, 13–17 t.
Estremoz / Borba / Vila Viçosa (Alentejo), Sintra (Lisbon), Ançã (Coimbra)
Sines, Lisbon, Setúbal.
Estremoz marble's fine grain structure makes it ideal for sculptural and architectural millwork. We track block colour consistency batch-to-batch.
Tunisia
Tunisia's stone resources span Jurassic (~160 Ma) marbles in Chemtou and Cretaceous (~100 Ma) limestones in Thala and Kesra. The Chemtou deposit (Giallo Antico) was quarried by the Romans for monuments across the empire.
Diamond wire for marble; mechanical excavators and chain saw for softer limestone.
Limestone: 2.4–2.8 × 1.3–1.6 × 1.1–1.3 m, 12–16 t. Marble: 2.5–2.8 × 1.2–1.5 × 1.1–1.4 m, 14–18 t.
Thala (Kasserine), Chemtou (Jendouba), Kesra (Siliana), Carthage (Tunis), Sidi Kacem, Keddel, Matmata, Ghoumrassen, Ain Drahem
Radès (Tunis), Sfax, Bizerte.
Tunisia is our growth frontier. We invested heavily in local partnerships from 2022 — bringing Tunisian stone to international specifications.
Iran
Iran holds some of the world's richest onyx and travertine deposits — banded calcite laid down by mineral hot springs from the Neogene to the present around Azarshahr and Mahallat, alongside Cretaceous limestones and granite massifs of the Zagros belt near Isfahan.
Diamond wire for travertine and marble benches; careful chain-saw and wire extraction for fragile onyx lenses, which occur as pockets rather than continuous beds.
Travertine: 2.4–2.8 × 1.3–1.6 × 1.0–1.2 m, 12–16 t. Onyx: smaller irregular blocks, typically 3–8 t, selected individually for banding and translucency.
Azarshahr (East Azerbaijan), Mahallat (Markazi), Natanz (Isfahan), Abadeh (Fars), Dehbid (Fars)
Bandar Abbas; overland via Türkiye to Mersin and Izmir for Mediterranean consolidation.
Iranian onyx and travertine are graded at the yard for banding and translucency before purchase — we consolidate shipments through our Izmir facility.
India
Indian marble (Rajasthan) is Precambrian (~800 Ma) — recrystallized from carbonate platforms of the ancient Aravalli range. Indian granites are among the oldest exposed rocks on earth at ~2,500 Ma (Archean).
Drill-and-blast for granite blocks with diamond wire secondary cutting. Diamond wire for marble. Gang saw processing at mill yards.
Granite: 3.0–3.5 × 1.6–2.0 × 1.5–1.8 m, 22–28 t. Marble: 2.5–3.0 × 1.3–1.6 × 1.2–1.5 m, 16–22 t.
Makrana (Rajasthan), Ambaji (Rajasthan), Udaipur (Rajasthan), Chimakurthy (Andhra Pradesh), Hyderabad (Telangana), Jalore (Rajasthan), Dharmapuri (Tamil Nadu)
Mundra, Kandla, Chennai, Mumbai.
We source only from quarries with valid environmental clearance and labour compliance certifications. Granite block selection is done at the yard after washing.
Brazil
Brazilian granites and quartzites are Precambrian (~2,000 Ma to ~1,500 Ma) — among the hardest, most durable stones in commercial use. The Bahia region yields unique blue granites coloured by sodic amphibole inclusions.
Drill-and-blast primary breakage, diamond wire secondary cutting. Block sizes are larger than Mediterranean norms due to massive deposit geometry.
Granite: 3.2–3.8 × 1.8–2.2 × 1.6–2.0 m, 25–32 t. Quartzite: 2.8–3.2 × 1.5–1.8 × 1.4–1.7 m, 20–26 t.
Feira de Santana / Ceará, Macaubas (Bahia), Bahia interior, Espírito Santo
Vitória (major granite export hub), Salvador, Santos.
Brazilian quartzite requires specialized processing tooling (diamond-impregnated blades). We work exclusively with processors who certify blade pressure and feed rate.
How the stone
comes out of the ground.
Diamond Wire Sawing
Marble, Granite, QuartziteA diamond-impregnated steel cable loops through drilled pilot holes and cuts through the rock mass at 6–12 m²/hour. Produces clean block faces with minimal micro-fracturing — essential for high-yield marble extraction.
Chain Saw Cutting
Limestone, TravertineA hydraulically powered cutting arm with tungsten-carbide teeth — similar to a oversized chainsaw — kerfs vertical and horizontal cuts in softer stones. Preferred for limestone benches where diamond wire would overheat.
Drill & Blast
Granite, Hard QuartzitePrecisely angled boreholes charged with low-vibration explosives to separate massive granite blocks from the bedrock. Modern micro-delay detonators control fracture propagation to within centimetres.
Helix / Vein Cutting
Premium MarbleA specialized diamond wire technique that follows the natural vein orientation — rather than cutting across it — to maximize the commercial value of figure-veined stones like Calacatta and Statuario.
Typical block dimensions
by stone type.
| Stone Type | Length (m) | Width (m) | Height (m) | Weight (t) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marble (Italy) | 2.7–3.2 | 1.3–1.6 | 1.2–1.5 | 18–22 |
| Marble (Greece) | 2.5–3.0 | 1.2–1.5 | 1.1–1.4 | 14–18 |
| Marble (Turkey) | 2.5–3.0 | 1.3–1.6 | 1.2–1.5 | 16–22 |
| Limestone (Turkey) | 2.4–2.8 | 1.4–1.8 | 1.2 | 14–19 |
| Limestone (France) | 2.4–2.8 | 1.3–1.7 | 1.0–1.3 | 12–17 |
| Travertine (Turkey) | 2.2–2.6 | 1.3–1.6 | 1.0–1.2 | 12–16 |
| Granite (Brazil) | 3.2–3.8 | 1.8–2.2 | 1.6–2.0 | 25–32 |
| Granite (India) | 3.0–3.5 | 1.6–2.0 | 1.5–1.8 | 22–28 |
| Quartzite (Brazil) | 2.8–3.2 | 1.5–1.8 | 1.4–1.7 | 20–26 |
Ranges represent commercially available block sizes. Actual dimensions vary by quarry and deposit geometry.
The dust settles differently in a marble quarry. It's fine, almost chalky — it gets into everything, but it never feels dirty. Just old. I was in the Apuan Alps last October, standing on a bench that had been worked continuously since the Romans. The quarry master — third generation — pointed to a face and said, "My grandfather cut that wall. My father cut beside it. I'm still following the same vein." He wasn't being sentimental. He was telling me that the stone dictates the schedule, not the other way around.
That's what we look for. Not the biggest quarry or the cheapest block, but the quarry master who can read the geology in the colour of the mud on his boots. That knowledge is irreplaceable. You can't scale it, you can't automate it, and you can't fake it in a PDF.
The scale behind
the selection.
Our sourcing footprint spans the Mediterranean basin, the Indian subcontinent, and the Brazilian shield. Each region selected for its geological distinctiveness — no two countries in our portfolio produce interchangeable stone.
From the Mediterranean
to the New World.
Looking for a specific
origin, block size, or colour?
Tell us your project parameters and we'll identify the quarry that can deliver. We don't stock generic inventory — every block we move is selected for a specific purpose.
Submit a Sourcing Inquiry
