Real Stone. Real Strong. Real Thin.
| Other Names | Breccia Aurora Gold Marble, Aurore Breccia Marble, Loredo Chiaro Marble | |
|---|---|---|
| Availability | Inquire | |
| Finishes | Polished, Honed, Sawn, Rockfaced, Sandblasted, Tumbled, Acid Wash, Antique | |
| Country of Origin | Italy | |
| Absorption | 0.2-0.45% | |
| 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 Aurora Marble displays a softly blended composition of warm beige, pale blush, and muted ivory, interwoven with diffuse veining and fragmented brecciated forms. Subtle washes of pink and faint green-gray move across the surface, giving the stone a layered, almost painterly quality with gentle variation rather than sharp contrast.
Exterior wall cladding and vertical transitions allow the fractured pattern of Breccia Aurora Marble to read at scale, where the variation softens broad surfaces without losing definition. Extending that same material into interior vertical applications—such as full-height wall panels or open feature planes—carries the surface across thresholds, maintaining continuity while introducing a more relaxed and nuanced visual field.
StonePly fabricates Breccia Aurora Marble as a thin layer of stone bonded to an aluminum honeycomb backing, producing panels with a consistent thickness and a significantly reduced overall weight. This allows the stone to be integrated across vertical surfaces more efficiently, while preserving the layered composition and subtle tonal shifts that define Breccia Aurora Marble.
For additional information regarding finishes, panel configurations, or technical resources related to Breccia Aurora 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.