ProBox for natural stone processors

Building design
Photo: Lithofin

Photo: Lithofin

With the system solution, you are perfectly equipped in the natural stone workshop and have all cleaners and impregnations to hand! In a solvent-resistant bucket with all application equipment…

The professional solution from Lithofin for use in natural stone factories

Natural stone processing plants are the linchpin in the processing of natural stone slabs. Cleaning and protective treatments are also required to ensure that kitchen worktops are ready for installation. To ensure that the necessary products are quickly to hand, Lithofin has put together a compact selection of cleaners, special products and the necessary tools in the ProBox. This means that the fabricator has all the products to hand and can concentrate on finishing the natural stone worktops.

The box consists of a solvent-resistant plastic bucket with a capacity of 20 liters. The lid closes the bucket airtight. There are various areas of application that are covered by the modular system:

  • ProBox protect: impregnations for factory processing (use in natural stone works)
  • ProBox clean: Special cleaner for natural stone (service box)

All cleaners are included in their original size (1 liter or 500 ml) and can also be retrofitted individually in these units.

Good to know: Lithofin products have been developed, produced and sold in specialist shops in Germany for 70 years. Certification according to the environmental management system DIN ISO 14001 and quality management according to 1996 DIN ISO 9001 ensures high quality in all process steps.

With the Lithofin ProBox Protect, the natural stone processing company has all the necessary products and tools to carry out factory impregnation work on natural stone, quartz composite and ceramic.

In addition to the high-quality Lithofin NanoTop and Lithofin FVE workshop impregnations (high color-intensifying effect), both of which impress with their short processing times and fast drying, the box also contains cleaning agents for preparing the surface. The box also contains microfiber cloths, nylon pads, melamine pads as well as disposable gloves, cups and brushes.

The Lithofin ProBox Clean contains the extensive product range of special cleaners and tools for the professional cleaning of kitchen worktops made of natural stone, quartz composite and ceramic. As a service box, it offers kitchen fitters or installers the perfect equipment on site with professional products such as the highly alkaline Lithofin ASR cleaner for removing stubborn layers of dirt or Lithofin LEV, which helps to repair small imperfections in sealants and can be used without rewashing. In addition, Lithofin LÖSEFIX for removing wax, oil and felt-tip pen residues or Lithofin KF sanitary cleaner against limescale stains, rust and soap residues.

This box also contains microfiber cloths, nylon pads, sponges as well as disposable gloves, brushes and cups. Stains can be professionally removed on site.

After the surfaces have been cleaned and protected with Lithofin products, Lithofin care sets round off the ProBox concept. For kitchen worktops in particular, the respective set for worktops made of natural stone, composite or ceramic provides end users with products that will maintain their condition for a long time. In addition to the suitable products, detailed care instructions round off the care set.

The boxes can be ordered from your personal Lithofin area manager from October. He or she will be happy to present the system to you on site in a customer appointment with a product demonstration.

Arrange your appointment at: 07024 / 9403-0

Find out more about the Lithofin ProBox and the use of professional cleaning products at our stand: Hall 7 | Stand B7!

We are looking forward to seeing you!

Contact: LITHOFIN AG | Sabine Ziebart | Heinrich-Otto-Str. 36 | 73240 Wendlingen
Phone: +49 7024 9403-0 | E-Mail: info@ | www.lithofin.de

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

#BeautySalonVanGoghMuseum

Building design
Amsterdam / Maurice van der Meijs

Amsterdam / Maurice van der Meijs

How the barber came to the museum: Last Wednesday, January 19, 2022, more than 70 museums, concert halls and theaters in the Netherlands protested against the ongoing closure of cultural institutions with unusual actions. In this way, the institutions drew attention to the unequal treatment of the cultural sector during the corona pandemic, as stores, hairdressers and gyms remained open. This is how […]

How the barber came to the museum: Last Wednesday, January 19, 2022, more than 70 museums, concert halls and theaters in the Netherlands protested against the ongoing closure of cultural institutions with unusual actions. In this way, the institutions drew attention to the unequal treatment of the cultural sector during the corona pandemic, as stores, hairdressers and gyms remained open.Amsterdam’s Van Gogh Museum, for example, was transformed into a beauty salon for a day: hashtag #BeautySalonVanGoghMuseum

In particular, the strict ban on cultural events since December 19, 2021 has met with resistance in the Netherlands. To express their protest, numerous museums therefore briefly opened for special events last Wednesday, January 19, 2022. In Amsterdam’s Van Gogh Museum, for example, nail artists were able to show off their skills, while other museums offered yoga classes, haircuts and manicures. Concert organizers also joined the unusual protest. Without further ado, the venerable Concertgebouw was transformed into a “Kapsalon Concertgebouw”, where you could also have your hair cut during a rehearsal of the symphony orchestra led by conductor Susanna Malkki! An unusual performance that met with great approval from the audience. Charles Ives’ Symphony Number 2 was played. “We don’t understand it and there is no justification for it, because in the last two years we have shown that it is very, very safe to go to a concert or a museum,” emphasized Simon Reinink, the director of the Concertgebouw.

Across the street at the Van Gogh Museum, visitors were offered manicures, beard care and a professional haircut at the same time under the hashtag #BeautySalonVanGoghMuseum , while viewing paintings by Vincent van Gogh. “We want to emphasize that it is safe to visit the museum,” commented Emilie Gordenker, the museum’s director since February 2020. “This is definitely something completely new at the Van Gogh Museum”. The museum director also adds: “More and more people are visiting museums in search of spiritual depth and the meaning of life, among other things. We also need a ‘mental’ gym!”. The area of ‘mental health’ is just as relevant for our museum, especially because of Van Gogh’s own mental state.”

Manicure, beard care and a professional haircut

Many institutions in the capital took part in the protests in this way. They all found it unfair that cultural institutions had to close during the lockdown, while stores, hairdressers and gyms remained open. On January 16, 2022, the one-month lockdown was eased in the Netherlands, allowing hairdressers, gyms and stores to reopen. Cultural institutions, on the other hand, were to remain closed.

Creative resistance on the part of cultural institutions

Gunay Uslu from the Dutch Ministry of Culture showed understanding for the protests, but urged caution. She wrote on Twitter: “There are creative protests on the part of cultural institutions. I understand this cry for help and that artists also want to show all the beautiful things they have to offer us, but the easing of the lockdown must take place step by step. Culture is right at the top of the agenda for us.” The government therefore held out the prospect of any easing of the strict coronavirus measures for January 25, 2022 at the earliest.

Reading tip: As of this week, solo self-employed cultural workers in Germany, including freelance restorers, can apply for Restart Aid 2022. They receive support that is not linked to operating expenses. Applications for Neustarthilfe 2022 in the funding period from January to March are now open. Read more here.

Ceramic diversity

Building design
Portfolio

Portfolio

The ceramics specialist NBK from Emmerich in the Lower Rhine region realizes façade designs that place the highest demands on creativity and inventiveness. For the detailed implementation of architectural designs, all resources in process engineering, color and glaze development, surface quality and the production process, right up to the firing of the ceramics, are activated.

With “Terrart”, the system for terracotta façades from NBK, a wide variety of design details can be realized in terms of shape, color, surface texture and glaze for unique, tailor-made solutions. NBK also offers unusual shapes, whether convex, concave, trapezoidal, curved or bent – with different radii and angles. Further variations are possible thanks to different profiles and matching corner solutions. With the option of combining different terracotta elements with each other, the variety of ideas and their realization can be increased even further. Whatever is to be expressed – from powerful to elegant, from restrained to eye-catching, from classic to avant-garde – NBK realizes individual architectural façade concepts.

An outstanding example of this is the residential tower at 111 West 57th Street in New York, which is currently being built next to the historic Steinway Hall and is therefore also known as the Steinway Tower. With a height-to-width ratio of 1:24, the tower will be the slimmest building in the world. For the exterior façade, the New York architectural firm SHoP Architects has opted for curved, extruded ceramics from NBK, finished with a special glaze. Upward-striving ceramic strips alternate with curved bronze profiles, and both give the window strips an incomparable look. The variety of ceramic profiles and the semi-transparent play of colors of the exclusive cream-white glaze, which shimmers from light to dark, create a lively effect.

Reeser Str. 235
46446 Emmerich
Emmerich, Germany

nbk.de