Co. Galway, Ireland

Connemara Marble

Ireland's only true marble — ancient green stone from the wild heart of Connemara

Colour

Rich green with white and cream veining. Colour ranges from pale sage to deep forest green depending on the seam. No two pieces identical.

Hardness

Hard (Mohs 3–4)

Best For

  • — Fireplaces & hearths
  • — Interior flooring
  • — Kitchen worktops
Connemara Marble, Marble from Co. Galway, Ireland
Image: Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA)

Connemara Marble is the only green marble native to Ireland — a deep green, serpentine-rich decorative stone quarried in the heart of Co. Galway since the Bronze Age. Today it is used for fireplaces, hearths, worktops, wall features, and the carved jewellery and gift pieces for which Ireland is internationally known. The remaining commercial operations are in the Recess–Moycullen corridor of Connemara.

For Connemara Marble suppliers, see the found.rocks directory. For an interior-stone comparison against the prized Irish dark stone, see Kilkenny Blue Limestone vs Connemara Marble. For the regional Galway picture and full supplier context, see Stonemasons in Galway.

Where Connemara Marble is quarried today

Two principal Joyce family operations work the stone today:

  • Connemara Marble Visitor Centre, Moycullen — opened by Ambrose Joyce in 1965, working two quarries in the part of Connemara known as "Joyce country". The Moycullen factory cuts, polishes, and works the green marble into natural-stone products and the carved jewellery and gift pieces that travel from here all over the world. Find them via the found.rocks directory.
  • Joyce Marble Limited, Recess — a fourth-generation Joyce family craft shop with the original Recess premises built around 1895; works extensively with Connemara Green Marble for jewellery and decorative pieces. Find them via the found.rocks directory.

For very large architectural projects, lead times for slab material can be substantial — early engagement with the supplier is essential.

What Connemara Marble looks like

No two pieces are alike. Each slab varies in:

  • Green intensity — from pale sage to deep emerald, depending on the seam
  • Veining — fine and delicate to bold and dramatic, in white, cream, or grey
  • Finish character — polished slabs reveal a depth and translucency that honed (matte) finishes deliberately soften

The green comes from serpentine — a mineral formed when ancient ocean-floor rocks were transformed by heat and pressure. The white veining is calcite, injected into fractures in the rock as mineral-rich fluids moved through the crust. That combination is geologically rare; Connemara is one of the few places in the world where it is exposed and worked.

Common applications

Fireplaces and hearths — the most traditional use. The green warms beautifully against firelight; a Connemara Marble surround is a statement piece and a genuine heirloom in a room. See the stone fireplace cost guide for Ireland for current pricing.

Worktops — used in bathrooms and occasional kitchens. The marble's hardness is moderate, so heavy-duty kitchen work surfaces are less common than granite alternatives.

Wall features — bookmatched Connemara Marble panels create extraordinary architectural moments in bathrooms, reception areas, and hospitality settings.

Jewellery and gift pieces — the carved-and-polished jewellery industry built around the stone in the 19th century continues today, with both Joyce operations running retail lines from the Moycullen factory and the Recess shop.

Heritage and ecclesiastical work — medieval chalices and ecclesiastical objects have been worked in Connemara Marble for centuries. Conservation and restoration work continues to use the stone.

Geology and history

Connemara Marble belongs to the Connemara Schist formation — a complex sequence of metamorphic rocks underlying much of the mountainous interior of Co. Galway. The stone formed over 600 million years ago, before complex life appeared on the planet, when continental collision drove ancient ocean-floor rocks under heat and pressure that transformed them into the serpentine-bearing marble seen today.

Connemara Marble has been worked by human hands for at least four thousand years — Bronze Age axe heads in the stone have been found at archaeological sites across Ireland. The modern commercial industry developed around Recess in Connemara in the 19th century, producing mantlepieces, table tops, and ornamental pieces exported across the British Isles and beyond. The 20th-century association with Irish identity — driven in part by the Joyce-family operations — turned Connemara Marble jewellery into one of the defining Irish gift products, a status it retains today.

Find Connemara Marble suppliers

Stone merchants, quarries, and fabricators working with Connemara Marble are listed in the found.rocks directory. For practical buying advice and what to ask, see How to find a reliable stonemason in Ireland, or the Galway stonemasons guide for the full regional picture.

What is Connemara Marble used for?

  • Fireplaces & hearths
  • Interior flooring
  • Kitchen worktops
  • Bathroom surfaces
  • Architectural detailing
  • Feature walls
  • Giftware & decorative items

Where to buy Connemara Marble

Verified suppliers stocking Connemara Marble across Ireland and the UK.

Stonemasons who work with Connemara Marble

Find a skilled installer experienced with Connemara Marble near you.

Frequently asked questions about Connemara Marble

Is Connemara Marble suitable for outdoor use?

Connemara Marble is primarily recommended for fireplaces & hearths. Check with your supplier for specific outdoor suitability.

How hard is Connemara Marble?

Connemara Marble rates Hard (Mohs 3–4) on the Mohs scale. This makes it durable for most applications but requires care when cutting.

Where does Connemara Marble come from?

Connemara Marble originates from Co. Galway, Ireland. It is one of Ireland's native natural stones, with a deep connection to the local landscape and building tradition.

How do I find a Connemara Marble installer near me?

Use the found.rocks directory to find stonemasons and contractors experienced with Connemara Marble. Filter by county and specialty to find someone local.

Search Connemara Marble installers in the directory →

Guides featuring Connemara Marble

Independent comparisons and buyer guides from the found.rocks Journal.