Government and institutional buildings are held to a standard the public sees every day. Rose Restoration builds recurring maintenance programs that keep marble lobbies, terrazzo corridors, stone stairs, and metal fixtures at that standard year round, so facility teams stop reacting to worn floors and start staying ahead of them.
What a maintenance program covers
Reactive restoration is expensive because damage compounds. A scheduled program catches wear before it becomes a grinding job. For a federal agency, a courthouse, a museum, a university, or a municipal building, that means predictable budgets and floors that never embarrass the institution.
- Scheduled cleaning, honing, and polishing of marble, terrazzo, granite, and natural stone floors.
- Diamond maintenance of polished concrete in support and public areas.
- Metal cleaning and refinishing of bronze, brass, and stainless doors, rails, and elevator surrounds.
- Sealing and protection to slow etching, staining, and traffic wear.
- Condition reporting so facility managers can plan and defend budgets.
Built around your operations
Government and institutional facilities cannot close. Our programs are sequenced around public hours, court calendars, exhibit schedules, and academic terms, with night and weekend work where the building requires it. Crews are background-checked and work within facility security and access protocols.
Why recurring maintenance beats reactive restoration
A marble floor that is maintained on schedule never needs a full restoration. A floor that is ignored needs grinding, which costs several times more and takes the space out of service for longer. Restoration preserves the original material and defers replacement, which is the responsible use of public and institutional funds. Over a multi-year program the maintained building looks better every day and costs less over its life.
Institutions we have served
Rose has restored and maintained surfaces for the Smithsonian Institution, the National Gallery of Art, the Virginia State Capitol, Marine Barracks Washington, the IMF, and the U.S. Department of the Treasury, along with commercial and hospitality clients across the region. See our case studies and our federal subcontracting page for contracting details.
Facility maintenance FAQ
How often should institutional stone floors be maintained?
It depends on traffic. High-traffic lobbies and corridors typically need attention on a quarterly or semiannual cycle, while lower-traffic areas can run annually. We assess each building and propose a schedule that holds the finish without over-servicing.
Can you work without disrupting building operations?
Yes. We sequence around public hours, court and exhibit schedules, and academic calendars, and we work nights and weekends when the building requires it.
Do you handle contracts on government maintenance schedules?
Yes. Rose is SAM.gov registered with a CAGE code and works on Davis-Bacon covered maintenance with certified payroll. Contracting details are in our capability statement.
What surfaces can one program cover?
Marble and natural stone, terrazzo, polished concrete, and architectural metal, all self-performed by our own crews under a single agreement.
Get a maintenance assessment
We will walk your building, document surface condition, and propose a program scaled to your operations and budget.
Contact Us
Download Capability Statement
Or call (703) 327-7676 to reach our team directly.