Real Stone. Real Strong. Real Thin.
| Other Names | Breccia Bluette, Grey Breccia Marble | |
|---|---|---|
| Availability | Inquire | |
| Finishes | Polished, Honed, Sawn, Rockfaced, Sandblasted, Tumbled, Acid Wash, Antique | |
| Country of Origin | Italy | |
| Fire Performance | 0 flame spread (per ASTM E 84) | |
| Freeze Thaw Resistance | Good | |
| Panel Sizes | Up to 4'×8' (1220mm×2440mm) | |
| Structural Performance (on Honeycomb) | Excellent |
Breccia Blue Marble presents a warm beige and taupe foundation interspersed with fractured brecciated formations, where soft blue-grey areas and subtle gold undertones move irregularly across the surface. Angular stone fragments are bound together by fine, wandering veins, creating a layered composition that shifts in density and scale from one area to the next. The interplay between broken segments and more fluid mineral lines gives Breccia Blue Marble a composed yet active visual character, with depth that becomes more apparent across larger panels.
Rather than reading as a uniform surface, Breccia Blue Marble lends itself to installations where variation is expected, such as feature zones that break up long wall runs, inset panels within larger cladding compositions, or areas where material transitions occur. It can also be introduced into lobby focal points, reception walls, or circulation corridors, where the patterning introduces movement and variation across each panel without feeling repetitive.
StonePly panels are created using a thin cut of Breccia Blue Marble bonded to an aluminum honeycomb backing, resulting in a panel with consistent thickness and significantly reduced weight compared to traditional stone. This approach allows Breccia Blue Marble to be more efficiently installed while aligning with the performance and coordination requirements of contemporary building envelope systems.
For additional information regarding finishes, panel configurations, or technical resources related to Breccia Blue Marble, please contact StonePly for more information.
You are probably more familiar with marble than you realize. From Michelangelo's mighty carrara marble David, to the intricately carved cenotaphs of the Taj Mahal, to the royal Marble Arch of Buckingham Palace, marble has been the stuff of civilized architecture and art for centuries. Being a form of limestone, it is softer than granite, making it more susceptible to deterioration and wear but a simple, regular maintenance routine will keep marble looking beautiful.
Marble has a soft, sophisticated aura. Small interior spaces will especially benefit from marble's less "busy" feel when compared to granite thanks to its large, flowing veins.
Certain marbles can be “book matched,” meaning the edges of two panels are paired to create a mirror image. Book matching's effect is best expressed on large panels.