Execution changes with panel size
Why Slab Installation Is Different from Standard Tile Work
Large slabs demand a different execution standard than conventional tile formats. Weight, size, and fragility
increase handling complexity, and even minor substrate imperfections become visible across broad surfaces.
Success depends on detailed prep, transport and positioning discipline, and correct tooling throughout cutting,
placement, and finishing stages.
We evaluate access constraints early, including elevators, stair paths, and turning radius in interior corridors.
Without this planning, slab movement can become a project bottleneck. By resolving logistics before install day,
we protect both material and schedule.
Access logistics
Delivery paths, turns, and lift constraints are checked before slab day becomes a site problem.
Flatness tolerance
Broad surfaces expose minor deviations, so substrate correction has to happen before setting.
Handling discipline
Dedicated equipment and controlled movement protect both the material and the final finish.
Controlled site workflow
Installation Process for Large Slabs
We begin with flatness validation and access planning, then map panel sequencing, veining direction, and dry-fit checks
before adhesive application. Installation is handled with dedicated equipment and continuous plane-alignment control.
01
Access and substrate preparation
We confirm movement paths, staging, and substrate flatness before any slab is brought into position.
02
Sequence planning and dry fit
Panel order, veining direction, cuts, and penetrations are reviewed so sight lines stay intentional.
03
Controlled slab placement
Dedicated transport and setting tools keep joint spacing, alignment, and handling safety under control.
04
Joint and edge finishing
Final detailing is completed so the surface reads as one refined system rather than separate pieces.
Sight lines, fixture cutouts, transition hierarchy, and veining continuity are resolved before setting so premium surfaces
keep their visual control after installation.
Material and design coordination
Material Selection and Design Coordination
Slab projects are often design-led, so we coordinate installation details with visual priorities: vein matching,
focal wall continuity, and transition hierarchy between planes. We advise on panel orientation to minimize awkward cuts,
especially around niches, faucets, and fixture penetrations.
For moisture zones, system compatibility remains essential despite premium appearance goals. Adhesive, membrane,
and joint materials must perform as a complete assembly. This balance between aesthetics and technical discipline is
what determines whether the final result stays stable over time.
We also coordinate slab orientation with lighting conditions. Natural and artificial light can emphasize or hide
panel joins depending on direction and reflectivity. During planning, we review where primary light sources hit the surface,
then adjust placement to keep transitions visually controlled in daily use.
Vein flow
Panel sequence should support the focal view
Matched direction and cut planning keep walls, floors, and feature surfaces visually connected.
Moisture zones
Premium appearance still needs full system logic
Membrane, adhesive, and joint materials must be chosen for assembly performance, not only finish quality.
Lighting review
Reflections can change how joins are perceived
Placement should account for daylight and fixture direction so transitions stay visually controlled.