The look
Deep black Nero — solid black base with bold flowing white pigment swirls poured through it like wet paint — over soft warm cream painted vanity cabinets. Polished brass faucets, two arched gold-framed mirrors, white marble penny tile backsplash, gold wall sconces. Bleached oak floors. The whole bathroom feels like a luxury hotel suite that someone actually lives in.
Why it works in Goodyear
Goodyear's recent design taste shifted toward "designer maximalist" — homeowners here aren't afraid of bold counters anymore. Nero delivers maximum visual drama. The bold white veining means the counter has its own personality without competing with art on the walls. Cream cabinets soften the contrast so the bathroom stays warm, not cold. And in a Goodyear market where listings are increasingly competing on photo quality (the Pebblecreek HOA reviews staging quality on every public listing), Nero is the master-bath countertop that wins the scroll.
The catch
Nero marble or honed black quartzite vanity tops run $100–180/sqft installed. A typical Goodyear master vanity — most are 72-84 inches in this market — runs $2,500–$5,500 for the counter alone.
How we do it for $999
Build-A-Counter pours Nero lab stone over your existing vanity counter in 8 hours. The black-with-white-swirl finish is engineered to match natural Nero — but with hand-poured pigment movement that's actually more dramatic than the geological version. Bonds permanently. Heat- and stain-resistant. Harder than the underlying surface.
The vanity above? $999.


