Quarried and processed on-shore.
Why the geography of supply matters as much as the stone itself, and what local processing actually delivers for a project brief.

There's a quiet detail in most of our project specifications that doesn't make it into the architectural drawings: the stone we supply never leaves the state to be cut.
Rural Stone WA quarries Toodyay Stone in the Avon Valley and processes it at our Hamilton Hill yard. The Donnybrook Sandstone we supply comes from the south-west region. The Stormy Waters granite is hand-selected internationally but cut to project formats on-shore. The whole chain lives inside Western Australia.
This matters for three reasons. First, traceability: every piece supplied to a project can be linked back to the seam, the day, and the operator. If a surface flaws three years post-install, we can tell you why. Second, lead time: domestic processing strips weeks from the supply timeline that overseas-cut stone carries. Third, the environmental position: less transport carbon, less consolidation packaging, less risk of damage in transit.
It's also a position on the work itself. The trade is older than the building industry. Keeping it local (quarry to cut to install, all within a few hundred kilometres) is how the WA stone industry has built its century of credibility, and how we plan to extend it.


