Lawrence & Monroe counties, south-central Indiana, USA
Indiana Limestone
The dimension stone of American civic architecture — Salem Formation, Bedford-Bloomington belt
Colour
Buff (warm tan-cream, most common), gray (cool blue-gray), and variegated grades. Uniform texture across vast quantities.
Hardness
Soft (Mohs 3–4)
Best For
- — Architectural cladding & ashlar
- — Mantels, hearths & fireplace surrounds
- — Window sills & door surrounds
Indiana Limestone is the building stone of American civic architecture. The Empire State Building, the Pentagon, the Washington National Cathedral, parts of the US Capitol, the Tribune Tower, Yankee Stadium, the Biltmore Estate, and well over a thousand other major US buildings are clad in it. The stone comes from a single narrow belt running through Lawrence and Monroe counties in south-central Indiana — the towns of Bedford, Bloomington, Oolitic — and from a single geological formation, the Mississippian-age Salem Limestone, deposited roughly 340 million years ago in a shallow tropical sea covering what is now the Midwest. About 80% of US dimensional limestone production comes from this belt. It has held that share since the 1850s.
For accredited supplier and installer sourcing, see how verification works on found.rocks. The Indiana Limestone Institute of America (ILI) maintains a separate Gold Quarrier / Gold Fabricator accreditation specific to this stone.
Why this stone shows up on every major US monument
Three properties decided architects on Indiana Limestone for more than a century of US civic building.
Uniform texture across vast quantities. The Salem Formation is geologically homogeneous over hundreds of square miles, which means a 20,000-block order for a public library cuts from the same color and grain as the 200-block order for the matching annex 30 years later. Most building stones cannot match colors at that scale.
Workability for carved and dimensional pieces. Mohs 3–4 is soft for a paving stone but ideal for stonemasons cutting columns, capitals, cornices, and ornamental panels. Indiana Limestone takes a chisel cleanly and holds detail.
Weather aging. The buff and gray grades develop a characteristic patina over 30–50 years that most architects consider an asset rather than wear. It is the visible-aging pattern of half a million American buildings.
The trade-off is the same trade-off as Texas Lueders: this is a soft limestone, not a hard sandstone. Indiana Limestone is not specified for high-traffic patios, vehicular surfaces, or environments with heavy de-icing salt exposure. Where the application is vertical (cladding, walls, mantels) or where wear is incidental (window sills, garden walls, decorative paving), the stone is exceptional. Where the application sees daily abrasion, harder native flagstones like Pennsylvania bluestone or Arizona flagstone are the right call.
What Indiana Limestone looks like
The trade-graded color names line up with how the bed varies along the Bedford-Bloomington belt:
- Buff — warm tan to cream, the most common grade. Default specification for cladding and dimension stone.
- Gray — cool blue-gray, quarried from specific seams. Used for contrast with buff, and for buildings where the cooler tone fits the design.
- Variegated — natural blend of buff and gray within single slabs, more common in select-grade material.
Grade is a separate axis from color. The ILI grading system runs from Standard (most uniform) through Select (color-graded) to Rustic (visible variation, including occasional fossil shell content). For monumental work, Standard or Select is the spec. For residential work where character is welcome, Rustic is cheaper and reads as warmer.
Surface finishes for residential use:
- Smooth — sawn and lightly honed, the standard for interior mantels and architectural pieces.
- Sandblasted — uniform matte texture, the standard for exterior cladding.
- Chiseled-edge — hand-chiseled face, used for retaining wall caps and rustic vertical surfaces.
- Split-face — quarry-split face, the roughest, used for veneer in heritage and rustic-modern designs.
Common residential applications
Most Indiana Limestone production goes to commercial and civic architecture. The residential applications that work with the stone's softness:
- Veneer cladding in 1-inch or 2-inch thin-set pieces. The dominant residential use.
- Mantels, hearths, and fireplace surrounds — exploits the stone's workability for carved profiles.
- Window sills and door surrounds — a Midwest architectural tradition stretching from Chicago to St. Louis.
- Garden walls and low retaining walls in 4-inch or 6-inch ashlar courses.
- Carved garden features — fountains, urns, plinths, bench bases.
- Decorative paving in light-use settings: a side courtyard, a garden walkway, a fireplace hearth landing. Not the main patio.
What it costs
Indiana Limestone pricing for residential use varies more by piece complexity than by square foot, because most retail material is fabricated to specific architectural cuts. Rough ranges for 2026:
- Thin veneer cladding (1-inch sawn pieces): $15–$30 per square foot material; installed $35–$70 per square foot.
- Dimensional ashlar (4-inch and thicker, sawn or split-face): $20–$45 per square foot material; installed $50–$110 per square foot.
- Mantels and hearth slabs: priced per piece, typically $400–$2,400 finished depending on size and carving.
- Carved or custom-profile pieces: priced per piece by stonemason hours, with significant variation.
Pricing is more consistent across the US than for the flagstones because Indiana sits roughly in the middle of the country. Coastal freight surcharges are smaller than the per-square-foot freight on Pennsylvania bluestone to California, and Polycor (the dominant producer) maintains regional distribution that keeps delivered prices stable across most US metros.
How to buy Indiana Limestone
The supplier structure is more concentrated than for any other US native stone, because most production runs through three corporate entities:
- Polycor (Indiana Limestone Company) — the largest producer; vertically integrated quarry, fabrication, and distribution. Sells through architectural specifiers and a network of regional stone yards.
- Independent Limestone Company — second-largest, ILI Gold Quarrier and Gold Fabricator accredited, operations near Bloomington.
- Smaller family operations near Bedford and Oolitic with long histories in the trade. Often the source for restoration and matching work on historical buildings.
For most residential buyers, the path is through a regional architectural stone yard that purchases pallets from one of the producers. Direct quarry orders are usually reserved for commercial and architectural projects above 1,000 square feet.
For installation, look for Indiana Limestone Institute (ILI) Gold Fabricator or Natural Stone Institute (NSI) accredited installers. Both accreditations cover quality, safety, and business practices. See how verification works on found.rocks for the editorial policy on the Verified badge.
What the geology actually is
The Salem Limestone is a Mississippian-age (Carboniferous Period) marine limestone deposited roughly 340 million years ago when central North America sat near the equator under a shallow tropical sea. The rock is oolitic — composed almost entirely of small, well-cemented calcium carbonate spheres (ooids) about 0.5 millimeters across, formed by concentric growth around tiny mineral nuclei in current-rippled shallows. This oolitic structure is what gives the stone its uniform texture across vast volumes: every cubic foot is statistically identical to every other cubic foot in the formation.
Per the USGS Mineral Resources Program and the Indiana Geological and Water Survey, commercial quarrying in the Bedford-Bloomington belt began in the 1820s and reached industrial scale after the Civil War. The Indiana state government formally designated Indiana Limestone as the state stone in 1971.
The stone you specify for a hearth or a window sill today comes from the same bed that produced the Empire State Building and the Pentagon.
What is Indiana Limestone used for?
- Architectural cladding & ashlar
- Mantels, hearths & fireplace surrounds
- Window sills & door surrounds
- Garden walls & low retaining walls
- Carved & dimensional architectural pieces
Stonemasons who work with Indiana Limestone
Find a skilled installer experienced with Indiana Limestone near you.
FP McCann
Magherafelt, Derry / Londonderry
The UK's largest precast concrete manufacturer, also quarrying Causeway basalt and Ennis limestone from eleven Northern Ireland sites for building stone and construction supply.
Irish Stone
Hillsborough, Dublin
ISO triple-certified natural stone consultancy, merchant and contractor with offices in Belfast, Dublin and London. Specialists in ethical stone sourcing, hard landscapes, facades and conservation.
Keegan Quarries
Rathmolyon, Meath
County Meath quarry group established 1990, supplying certified pyrite-free aggregates, limestone, ready-mix concrete and blocks across Dublin, Kildare, Meath and Louth. Winner, Sisk Supplier of the Year 2023.
Kilsaran
Dunboyne, Louth
Ireland's largest independent concrete products manufacturer, founded 1964. Supplies paving, blocks, aggregates, asphalt, renders and precast concrete across Ireland and the UK.
Albion Stone
Portland, Dorset
Fourth-generation family business mining Portland Stone from two Dorset mines. The only company globally rated 'Excellent' under BES 6001.
London Stone
Staines-upon-Thames, Greater London
UK market leader in natural stone and porcelain paving with 11 showrooms nationwide. Supplies sandstone, limestone, granite, Yorkstone, basalt and slate with free next-day delivery over £750.
Frequently asked questions about Indiana Limestone
Is Indiana Limestone suitable for outdoor use?
Yes, Indiana Limestone is well-suited for outdoor applications including garden walls & low retaining walls.
How hard is Indiana Limestone?
Indiana Limestone rates Soft (Mohs 3–4) on the Mohs scale. This makes it relatively easy to work but most suitable for sheltered or interior use.
Where does Indiana Limestone come from?
Indiana Limestone originates from Lawrence & Monroe counties, south-central Indiana, USA. It has been used in building and landscaping for centuries across the region.
How do I find a Indiana Limestone installer near me?
Use the found.rocks directory to find stonemasons and contractors experienced with Indiana Limestone. Filter by county and specialty to find someone local.
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