The owner’s name is Jimmy and his head foreman’s name is Jerry. They save you money on your granite countertops and and cabinetry work by essentially operating on word of mouth and reputation. They have no marketing costs as they do none. They are conveniently located in Brooklyn off of Hamilton Ave next to the Home Depot. We went to several places to price our new countertops. We decided on absolute black granite. For materials alone we were getting prices between $ 35(Jian Feng’s quote) up to $ 75 from Ikea. Quotes to get 33 square foot of granite, cut, measured and installed from Jian Feng was $ 2,200 out the door including labor, tips and tax! PS this is not a fly by night operation so if you pay all cash they still charge tax. This came out to $ 1,672 for labor and materials, $ 150 tip for three guys to install the countertop, plus $ 100 to remove our old countertop and the rest in tax. They did a fantastic job and quickly with no issues. Jimmy is the only one who speaks proper english and he will guide you through the entire process and explain everything carefully. The only thing you need to work out in advance is whether or not you are going to pay them to remove the countertop or if you are going to do this yourself. I will let pics speak for their work. Just check out my pic folder. PS almost forgot to mention, they are a sub-contractor to do kitchens for several construction companies that aren’t Chinese. Jimmy was the most forthright out of all the contractors we saw and spent 30 minutes just explaining the costs and layout and design of our countertop before even bringing in pricing. He was confident that he would not be undersold and still could deliver a quality countertop. After he gave us a quote he told us to take our time and to check prices elsewhere! No lie! He said that his price would be the best out of anywhere we checked and it was. Their installation team was also excellent! They came on time to take measurements of our countertop and to ensure that they could get the countertop into our little 1930’s colonial.