Very friendly with all the popular types of fence and flooring.
Prices are reasonable, Lonnie and Haley are very helpful, and it seems like the go-to place for ActiveYards vinyl fence.
If you want new granite countertops, you are not just picking a surface. You are choosing a material, a layout, and an installation that has to look right and hold up for years. Bracewell provides granite countertop installation for homeowners and businesses across the Florida Panhandle and Northwest Florida, with granite surfaces built around fit, function, and a clean finished look.
Granite is natural stone, which means no two slabs look exactly the same. Color, movement, veining, and mineral patterns all change from slab to slab. That is part of what makes granite countertops appealing in the first place. You are not getting a flat, generic surface. You are getting a stone product with its own character.
4.7 Star Rating
Very friendly with all the popular types of fence and flooring.
Prices are reasonable, Lonnie and Haley are very helpful, and it seems like the go-to place for ActiveYards vinyl fence.
Lonnie spent over 2 hours of his day trying to help me solve this giant problem.
I called asking for professional advice after another contractor did a terrible flooring job, and the time and help I got made me wish we had started with Bracewell’s from the beginning.
I greatly appreciate the fine work done by Karen Pittman and her crew on my new fence.
They were professional, easy to work with, fairly priced, and I love how the finished fence turned out.
We are very satisfied with the fence Bracewell’s built for us.
The materials appear to be very good quality, they finished the job in a day and a half, and I would recommend them.
I purchased CoreTec flooring from Bracewell’s in Mexico Beach and am very pleased.
The price was lower than other businesses in the area, and Billy was patient and enjoyable to work with every time I came in.
Great experience with them.
Lonnie was amazing and helped me every step of the way in finding the right product for our needs. The team was friendly, honest, and reasonably priced.
Homeowners choose granite countertops because each slab has its own natural color, movement, and character. The right granite countertop installation starts with choosing a slab that fits the room, then planning the details around cabinet support, seams, sink cutouts, edge profiles, and long-term care. Bracewell helps customers compare granite with the full project in mind.
If you are planning granite countertop installation, Bracewell can help you compare slabs, review the layout, and move the project forward with less guesswork. Reach out today to request an estimate and talk through your new granite countertops.
A clean install starts before installation day. Granite is heavy. The cabinets need to be level, properly secured, and ready to support the weight of the slab. If the cabinetry is off, the countertop can end up stressed, misaligned, or harder to install cleanly.
That is why prep matters. If you are replacing existing countertops, the old countertops need to be removed first. The installation area should be cleared out. Small appliances, loose items, and anything sitting on or around the existing countertops should be moved. Drawers and cabinets should be emptied where needed. If there is nearby furniture close to the job site, it helps to cover nearby furniture and protect the space before work begins.
This is also the time to ask questions. If you want to know how the process works, what the seams will look like, how cutouts will be handled, or what to expect on installation day, this is when that conversation should happen.
Granite countertop installation is not one quick step. It is a process.
It starts with measurements and a template. Accurate measurements are what make a successful installation possible. The template helps map the slab layout, sink cutouts, cooktop cutouts, edge details, walls, backsplashes, and any places where pieces meet.
From there, the granite slab goes into fabrication. That is where the slab is cut to size, openings are created for the sink or cooktop, and the pieces are shaped for the final layout. Depending on the project, the job may use one slab or multiple slabs. If multiple slabs are needed, seams have to be planned carefully so the final surface still looks clean and intentional.
On installation day, the installers bring the finished pieces to the site and begin dry fitting the granite before anything is secured permanently. Dry fitting matters because it lets the team check the fit, confirm the cutouts, review seams, and make sure the slabs sit correctly on the cabinets. Once the fit is confirmed, the granite is secured in place using adhesive, epoxy, silicone, or caulking where needed.
After that come the finishing touches. Seams are filled, the sink area is checked, the surface is inspected, and the installation area is cleaned up so the new countertops are ready for sealing and use.
A lot of granite countertop installation problems show up in the details. The slab may be beautiful, but if the seams are sloppy, the cutouts are off, or the surface is not level, the job will never look right.
That is why precision matters. The sink opening has to fit. The cooktop cutouts have to be right. The edges need to line up cleanly. The seams need to look tight and intentional, especially where multiple slabs meet. An island, bathroom vanity, or larger kitchen layout can make this more complex, not less.
Good granite countertop installation is really about making all those details disappear into one finished surface that feels clean, solid, and built for the room.
Granite is porous, so sealing matters. A proper sealer helps protect the surface from moisture and stains, especially in kitchens and bathrooms where the countertops get daily use. Granite countertops should be sealed before use and resealed over time to help maintain the surface.
The good news is that once granite is sealed, care is straightforward. Avoid abrasive cleaners. Avoid overly acidic products. Use cleaners that are safe for natural stone. If oil, grease, or food hits the surface, clean it up instead of letting it sit. Granite will hold up extremely well, but like any natural stone, it performs best when you treat it like a premium material instead of an indestructible one.
Cost usually comes down to a few main things: the square foot total, the slab you choose, the number of cutouts, whether you are removing existing countertops, how many seams the project needs, and how complex the layout is.
A simple bathroom project is not priced the same as a large kitchen with an island, multiple slabs, backsplashes, and detailed cutouts. Granite slab selection matters too. Some stone is more straightforward. Some premium granite materials cost more because of color, movement, or availability.
The point is not to throw out a meaningless number before anyone sees the job. The point is to understand what actually drives cost so you can compare options and make a better decision.
Most people think first about kitchens, and that makes sense. Granite countertops are a strong fit for kitchens because they handle heat, daily use, and heavy traffic well. But granite also works in bathrooms, bars, office spaces, and other areas where you want a durable surface with a more finished look.
If you are replacing laminate, tile, wood, marble, or older stone countertops, granite can be a serious upgrade in both appearance and performance. It brings a more substantial feel to the room, and when it is installed well, it can lift the whole space.