Local Bathtub, Tile and Sink Refinishing in San Marcos, TX

Bathtub refinishing in San Marcos, 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 San Marcos, Texas

Sink Refinishing in San Marcos, 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. San Marcos, Texas.
San Marcos, the county seat of Hays County, is on Interstate Highway 35 twenty-five miles south of Austin in the southeastern part of the county. It was the site of several Spanish attempts at colonization before it became the center of Anglo-American settlement in the area. The first such attempt, in 1755, saw the short-lived establishment of the San Xavier missions and the presidio of San Francisco Xavier. These were relocated less than a year later, and the headwaters of the San Marcos River remained unsettled for another half century. In 1808 the Spanish governor of Texas, Manuel Antonio Cordero y Bustamante, sponsored the civil settlement of San Marcos de Neve near the same site, but floods and Indian raids prompted its abandonment in 1812. In November 1846 Thomas G. McGehee became the first Anglo-American to settle in the vicinity of the San Marcos Springs, but William W. Moon has been identified as the original resident of the site that became San Marcos proper. Moon was soon joined by other former members of John C. Hays's company of Texas Rangers and by Gen. Edward Burleson. Cayton Erhard opened the first store and post office by 1847, and the First Methodist Church began soon after. The Texas Legislature organized Hays County on March 1, 1848, and designated the young community as the county seat. San Marcos already had 387 residents. In 1851 General Burleson, William Lindsey, and Dr. Eli T. Merriman took possession of a 640-acre section of the Juan Veramendi grant and laid out the town center. Tarbox and Brown stagecoaches linked San Marcos with Austin and San Antonio in 1848, and the town began its development as the commercial center for the cart trade between area farmers and ranchers and coastal commission merchants. It also became a center for ginning and milling local agricultural products. Slowed for a while by the Civil War, the population in 1870 had grown only to 742, but in the decade following the arrival of the International-Great Northern Railroad on August 31, 1880, it reached 2,335. In that decade the town supported two banks, an opera house, and a variety of stores, saloons, and other businesses.