Architects like Roger Hopkins. Carpenters and electricians
like him, too. But plumbers? They hate him. It's not that they
don't appreciate his stone benches and garden sculpture —
but they're the ones who have to install the sinks and tubs he
carves from giant boulders.
Hopkins works from an outdoor "studio" in North Palm Springs,
Calif. Every so often, trucks come by, delivering huge pieces
of stone that Hopkins and his associate, Saori Itose, transform
into hot tubs.
The chunk of black granite — actually gabbro —
shown here (1) started out as an 18-ton boulder but was cut in
half at the quarry with a diamond wire saw. Itose used a
pneumatic cutoff saw with a water-cooled diamond blade to score
the stone (2) and a chisel to chip out the waste (3). In the
two-and-a-half weeks it took to rough out the tub, she removed
four tons of material.
Of course, no one wants to pay $30,000 for a tub that
will tear a swimsuit, so once the boulder was hollowed out,
Itose smoothed the inside with an angle grinder equipped with
successively finer cup wheels. After that, the tub was nearly
complete (4).
Two tasks remain — drilling holes for the jets and
polishing the surface with a flexible diamond wheel. The
completed tub will be installed at a nearby spa. In the
meantime, some advice for all you plumbers: Don't get too
comfortable. There were two halves to that boulder, and the
other five-tonner could be headed your way. —
David Frane