Thank you for visiting our website and your interest in MasterCraft Countertops. Do you have a project in mind? It would be a pleasure for us to work with you. Please spend some time and browse our website and feel free to contact us today to schedule a No-Obligation In-Home Consultation.
MasterCraft's countertop division offers all types of counters such as Granite, Quartz, Solid Surface (Corian) and Laminates (Formica) and can handle all aspects of your new countertop including design, templeting and installation as well as all plumping, electrical and cabinet modifications necessary for your new counter. We can also provide under counter lighting, new flooring, custom tile backsplash and general lighting packages.
Unlike most other Granite and Countertop companies, a representative from MasterCraft will bring our samples to your home for you to view next to your cabinets and flooring, allowing you to pick the perfect countertop for your kitchen.
MasterCraft Kitchen & Bath is a member of NKBA (National Kitchen & Bath Association), North Penn Chamber of Commerce and we have been featured on TLC's "Moving Up" Tv show.
MasterCraft Kitchen & Bath can help minimize the intrusion into your daily routine by handling all aspects of the countertop installation process.
If you are looking for a Bucks County or Montgomery County Kitchen or Bathroom remodeling contractor please call us today at (215) 362-5344 or complete our online service request form.
Huntingdon Valley PA
Townships: Abington, Upper Moreland & Lower Moreland
County: Montgomery
Zipcode: 19006
History:
In 1684, as Penn began to resolve the matters of his own estate, he chose to save one parcel of land for a close friend of the family, Nicholas Moore, a prominent London physician, and on June 7th 1684, the lands which now comprise Upper and Lower Moreland were granted to Moore and deemed the "Manor of Mooreland." Predating the existence of Montgomery County itself, it was not until 1784, at the founding of Montgomery County, that the area changed its namesake to Moreland Township, and remained this way until the end of the nineteenth century.