• Home
  • >
  • Products
  • >
  • silestone countertops used in bathroom
  • Desert Yellow Silestone Countertops Used In Bathroom

    Desert Yellow Silestone Countertops Used In Bathroom

    Quartz Countertops Aren't Solid Quartz In most quartz countertops some quartz is present. About 10 percent of the material volume in a quartz countertop isn't stone at all, but rather a polymeric or cement-based binder. And the other 90 percent? Crushed up waste granite, marble, and natural stone or recycled industrial wastes such as ceramic, silica, glass, mirrors, etc.1 Yes, maybe some actual quartz—sometimes maybe a lot of it. All this rock material mixed together and held together with binders is what gives a so-called quartz countertop the look and feel of stone. More accurately, a quartz countertop should probably be called engineered stone or compound stone—terms that more accurately describe the way these products are created. The industry, in fact, is increasingly using the term engineered stone to refer to this type of countertop. Bottom line: quartz countertops may include greater or lesser quantities of actual quartz, but they include no solid quartz extracted from quarries and likely have lots of other materials in them, as well.

    Send Email Details
Get the latest price? We'll respond as soon as possible(within 12 hours)

Privacy policy