Are cracks and chips damaging the beauty of your marble? Diamond Stone Restoration Corp provides expert Marble Restoration in SoHo, NY, repairing and restoring your marble surfaces to an ideal condition. Erase those imperfections!
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Diamond Stone Restoration Corp is the preferred choice for Marble Restoration in New York City, offering marble restoration in SoHo. Our technicians have a diverse range of experience handling everything from small surface cracks to larger chips, restoring your marble to its finest shape. Using advanced repair methods and top-quality materials, we affirm long-lasting results that blend perfectly with your existing stone.
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Marble Restoration in SoHo helps safeguard the beauty and strength of your marble surfaces. Cracks can worsen over time, but prompt, professional repair can restore your marble and prevent further damage. Diamond Stone Restoration Corp specializes in high-quality repairs that blend seamlessly with your existing stone. Contact us today for a free estimate.
During the colonial period, the land that is now SoHo was part of a grant of farmland given to freed slaves of the Dutch West Indies Company, and the site of the first free Black settlement on Manhattan island. This land was acquired in the 1660s by Augustine Hermann, and then passed to his brother-in-law, Nicholas Bayard. The estate was confiscated by the state as a result of Bayard’s part in Leisler’s Rebellion, but was returned to him after the sentence was annulled.
In the 18th century natural barriers - streams and hills - impeded the growth of the city northward into the Bayard estate, and the area maintained its rural character. During the American Revolution, the area was the location of numerous fortifications, redoubts and breastworks. After the war, Bayard, who had suffered financially because of it, was forced to mortgage some of the property, which was divided up into lots, but even then there was very little development in the area, aside from some manufacturing at Broadway and Canal Street.
Serious development of the area did not begin until the Common Council, answering the complaints of landowners in the area, drained the Collect Pond, which had once been an important source of fresh water for the island, but which had become polluted and rank and a breeding ground for mosquitoes. A canal was built to drain the pond into the Hudson, and the canal and pond were both later filled in using earth from nearby Bayard’s Hill. Once Broadway was paved and sidewalks were built there and along Canal Street, more people began to make their homes there, joining earlier arrivals such as James Fenimore Cooper.
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