Industrial concrete floors take a beating from forklift traffic, chemical spills and constant abrasion that ordinary concrete was never designed to withstand indefinitely, which is why so many factories eventually move to a dedicated epoxy flooring system.
The right epoxy system depends on how the floor is used. High-traffic forklift aisles need a thicker, self-levelling build-up for durability, while areas with occasional chemical spills benefit from a chemical-resistant top coat formulated for the specific substances handled on site.
Anti-slip finishes matter more than facility managers often expect. A high-gloss finish looks impressive in a showroom but can become genuinely dangerous in areas exposed to water, oil or hydraulic fluid — a textured or quartz-broadcast finish is the safer specification for those zones.
Surface preparation is, again, the deciding factor in longevity. Old concrete floors need grinding to remove laitance and any embedded contamination before an epoxy system will bond properly; skipping this step is the single biggest cause of epoxy flooring delaminating within the first year.
Epoxy flooring also functions as a secondary waterproofing layer on ground-level slabs, which is a useful side benefit for warehouses in areas with a history of ground moisture or minor seasonal flooding.
