Local Bathtub, Tile and Sink Refinishing in Hays, TX

Bathtub refinishing in Hays, Texas
Bathtub Refinishing is the art of restoring your old, battered, and worn bathtub to its original luster and beauty. Reglazing can save you as much as 90% over the cost of replacing your old bathtub, even if all you are needing is a change of color to update and beautify your bathrooms.

Tile Reglazing in Hays, Texas

Sink Refinishing in Hays, Texas
Sink Reglazing returns your mounted kitchen and bathroom single or double basined sinks to their original beautiful shine. There’s really nothing that fills a room with warmth like a newly minted old style sink. Drain boarded farm sinks, pedestal sinks, wall mounted bathroom sinks, etc. can all be made brand new.
We use a dual primer system developed through decades of lab and in the field testing, creating a strong bond between your existing fixtures and our professional coatings. Paired with our best in the business surface prep process, your refinished bathroom or kitchen surface cures properly, resists fading, and is built to last.
As senior members of the Professional Bathtub Refinishers Association (PBRA), our extended team brings over 300 years of combined refinishing experience to every residential and commercial project. Every job includes a 5-year written warranty, giving you confidence and peace of mind.
Whether you call it bathtub refinishing, tile refinishing, tub reglazing, porcelain resurfacing, or bathtub reglazing, we provide consistent, high-quality results at a fraction of replacement costs. View our local work and contact Texas Reglazing today for professional service in. Hays, Texas.
Hays City, about eleven miles northwest of San Marcos on the road between Kyle and Wimberley, was perhaps the most ambitious failure in Hays County history. The community was a proposed replacement for San Marcos as the county seat and was laid out in 1908 on land owned by county-center advocate Hezekiah Williams. Within two years Hays City could boast of everything-a two-story hotel, a department store, a livery stable, a lumberyard, a church, and even a weekly newspaper (the Hays City Enterprise)-except settlers. In 1909 Williams went so far as to chart a rail route from Kyle to Hays City, but the town never attracted enough settlers to take on a life of its own, nor even to open a post office. Williams's petition for an election to make Hays City the county seat apparently failed, as did eventually all of his enterprises.