
Brèche Sarrancolin has anchored French interior architecture since the seventeenth century — quarried in the Hautes-Pyrénées, specified by Mansart at Versailles, and laid through the state apartments of nearly every grand French palace that followed. It is a true breccia: a chaotic, architectural field of grey and rose marble clasts cemented in a warm bronze-amber matrix, with the occasional flash of dove white and graphite.
“Honed at 2cm reads contemporary — the brecciated geometry stays graphic, but the surface settles into the room rather than performing.”
Antolini's selection holds the historic colour palette without softening it. Honed at 2cm reads contemporary — the brecciated geometry stays graphic, but the surface settles into the room rather than performing. The stone suits projects that want age without nostalgia: a library fireplace, a dining room floor, a vestibule wall, or a single bookmatched panel behind a sculptural object.
Currently on the floor at 117" × 66". One slab, with additional material available against project orders direct from Verona.
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