Design Services
- Epoxy and polyaspartic floor coating systems sized to traffic load
- Moisture testing and cure-time verification before coating application
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Epoxy and polyaspartic floor systems, tilt-wall panel painting, and curb and safety-zone coating
Concrete that's finished but not protected is concrete that's going to spall, stain, or wear through faster than the slab underneath it should. We self-perform painting and protective coatings as a direct follow-on to our flatwork and structural concrete scopes — epoxy and polyaspartic floor systems for warehouse and industrial slabs, exterior coatings for tilt-wall panels, and curb, bollard, and safety-zone painting — so the same team that pours and finishes the concrete can also protect and mark it, without a gap in accountability between trades.
Interior floor coatings are sized to the load: high-build epoxy for standard warehouse traffic, polyaspartic systems where forklift wear and chemical exposure are heavier, and broadcast or quartz-filled systems where slip resistance matters in loading and staging areas. We wait for the industry-standard 28-day concrete cure before coating so the slab's moisture vapor emission rate is where it needs to be — coating too early is the most common reason floor systems delaminate within the first year, and we've seen enough of those call-backs on other contractors' work to build our own schedule around getting it right the first time. Color-coding is part of the scope on most industrial floors: aisle boundaries, staging zones, and safety perimeters marked to OSHA-referenced conventions so a facility's floor layout does double duty as its safety plan.
Exterior work covers tilt-wall panel painting and coating systems built for the swing between Fort Worth's summer heat and winter freeze-thaw cycles — elastomeric and acrylic systems that flex with the panel instead of cracking at the joints, which is where most exterior coating failures start. We coordinate exterior color and finish decisions with a project's branding or ownership requirements early, since panel painting on a tilt-wall building is easiest to schedule right after erection and tie-in, before scaffolding and site access get complicated by other trades moving in.
We also handle the smaller-scope work property owners and facility managers call about between larger projects: curb painting, bollard color coding at loading docks, ADA symbol stenciling in parking areas, and touch-up coating on high-wear zones like dock aprons and forklift turn radii. Whether it's a full 100,000-square-foot warehouse floor system or a single dock apron that needs recoating after a hard winter, we scope, price, and schedule it around your operation rather than asking a facility to shut down for a coating crew's convenience.
Representative project scenario — not a specific client reference.
Scope
Polyaspartic floor coating system with color-coded aisle marking for a 90,000 sq ft distribution facility
Client Situation
A logistics tenant needed the floor coated and marked before a move-in deadline, with racking and forklift traffic starting within two weeks of turnover.
Our Approach
We verified moisture levels were within spec after the slab's cure period, applied a polyaspartic system chosen for its faster cure time, and laid out aisle and safety-zone markings to the tenant's operations plan.
Expected Outcome
Floor system cured and ready ahead of the move-in date, with zero delamination or rework in the following year.
Educational content only. Not engineering, legal, or construction advice. Coating systems and cure timelines should be confirmed against manufacturer specifications and project-specific moisture testing.
We generally wait a full 28-day cure before coating a new slab, which gives the concrete time to reach an appropriate moisture vapor emission rate. Coating too early is the most common cause of early delamination, so we build it into the project schedule rather than compress it.
Epoxy is the standard, cost-effective choice for typical warehouse and industrial floor traffic. Polyaspartic systems cure faster and hold up better under heavier forklift traffic and chemical exposure, which makes them worth the added cost on higher-use facilities.
Yes. We apply elastomeric and acrylic exterior coating systems designed to flex with panel movement through Texas's heat and freeze-thaw swings, and we coordinate the work with panel erection and tie-in scheduling.
Yes. We lay out and paint aisle boundaries, staging zones, and safety perimeters as part of most industrial floor coating scopes, following OSHA-referenced color conventions.
Yes. We take standalone touch-up and recoating work on high-wear areas like dock aprons, curbs, and bollards, not only full-building coating projects.
Concrete and structural demolition for commercial and industrial projects across Fort Worth, TX — selective demo, full structural teardown, and slab removal.
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Learn moreReady to discuss your commercial or industrial concrete project? Fill out the form and our team will provide a detailed bid within 48 business hours.
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Fort Worth, TX & Greater DFW
NOTE: We work directly with property owners, developers, and facility managers, and we also bid as a subcontractor to general contractors.
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