Kitchen islands with stone worktops are a focal point of modern kitchens — and they take significant impact from daily family use. Unlike wall-mounted worktops, islands are exposed on multiple sides, have unsupported overhangs used as breakfast bars, and often feature complex profiles like mitred joints, waterfall edges and double-ended formats. When damage occurs, specialist repair is needed.
Why Island Worktops Are More Vulnerable
Wall-mounted worktops are protected on one side by the wall. Islands are fully exposed — corners, edges and overhangs can all be struck by chairs, bags, appliances or dropped items. The corners of islands are the most common chip location because they project into the room and receive more accidental impact than any other part of the worktop.
Common Island Worktop Damage
- Corner chips — the most common island damage
- Edge chips along the overhang perimeter
- Waterfall edge joint damage where two pieces meet at 90°
- Mitred joint chips and separation
- Scratches on the top surface from everyday use
Waterfall Edge Repair
Waterfall edges — where the stone continues down the side of the island to the floor — create mitred joints at the top corner. These joints are structurally vulnerable and can develop chips or separation where the two pieces meet. Our technicians repair waterfall edge joint damage using reinforced epoxy compounds that bond the repair to both planes of the joint.
Overhang Edge Repair
Island overhangs used as breakfast bars take constant impact from chairs and stools pushing back. Edge chips along the overhang underside are very common and can be repaired without removing the worktop or disrupting the kitchen.
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