Refinish your counters instead of ripping them out
Berkeley kitchens hold a lot of original material. The Craftsman bungalows in Elmwood and the brown-shingle homes up in the Berkeley Hills were often re-counter-topped in the 1970s and 80s with laminate, and bathrooms across North Berkeley and Claremont still carry cultured-marble vanity tops that have yellowed and lost their sheen. Replacing those counters means tearing out the old top, often damaging the backsplash and the cabinet edge, paying for new material, and waiting on a fabricator. Refinishing skips all of that. We bond a fresh, hard finish directly onto the surface you already have, so the counter looks new by the end of the day and your cabinets never move.
The work is the same craft we use on cast-iron tubs, applied to a flat horizontal surface. We strip the grease and old sealers, repair the chips and worn spots, etch or scuff the surface so a primer can grab, then spray an even acrylic-urethane topcoat. The result is a smooth, non-porous counter — no seams, no fabricator lead time, and a price that is a fraction of replacement. Most Berkeley homeowners call us because a single burn mark or a worn patch around the sink has made an otherwise solid counter look dated, and they would rather refresh it than open up a remodel they did not plan on.
Rentals are the other big reason the phone rings. Owners turning over student units near Southside and Le Conte, and landlords with flats in West Berkeley, want a counter that photographs clean for the next lease without the cost or downtime of new stone. A refinished top hands back a bright, sealed surface that holds up to tenant use and a 5-year written warranty behind it.