A floor that keeps working as hard as you do
Commercial concrete has to take forklifts, pallet jacks, foot traffic, chemical spills, and constant cleaning — and in a customer-facing space, it also has to look sharp. A professional coating turns raw or worn slab into a sealed, easy-to-clean, slip-rated surface that resists abrasion and chemicals and brightens the whole space by reflecting your lighting.
The two questions that decide a commercial job are how much downtime you can afford and what the floor has to survive. Fast-curing polyaspartic keeps you closed for hours, not days, and the system is matched to the use — decorative flake for a showroom, heavy-duty industrial polyurea for a wash-down bay or warehouse.
Downtime is the real costFor most businesses the coating price matters less than the days offline. We phase work zone by zone and schedule nights and weekends so your operation keeps moving — and the fast-cure systems mean a bay can be back in service the next morning.
Spaces we coat
- Warehouses & distribution — abrasion- and forklift-rated floors with forklift-lane striping.
- Auto & mechanic shops — chemical- and hot-tire-resistant floors that wipe clean of oil and brake fluid.
- Showrooms & retail — high-gloss decorative flake or metallic finishes that sell the space.
- Restaurants & back-of-house — sanitary, slip-resistant, wash-down-friendly coatings.
- Gyms, hangars & commercial garages — durable, high-traffic systems in your colors.
Systems & safety options
Depending on the space we install decorative flake, solid-color industrial, or high-build polyurea systems, with options that matter in a commercial setting:
- Safety striping & color coding for walkways, forklift lanes, and hazard zones — coated in, not taped on.
- Anti-slip texture dialed to the space, heavier for wet and wash-down areas.
- Chemical & abrasion resistance for shops and industrial floors.
- Coving and moisture mitigation where sanitation or slab moisture requires it.
Because scope, downtime, and square footage vary so much, commercial floors are quoted after a site visit rather than off a flat per-foot rate.
