🏭 COMMERCIAL & WAREHOUSE EPOXY FLOORING
Commercial & Warehouse Epoxy Flooring in Bennett, CO
Commercial and warehouse floors along the I-70 corridor in Bennett see a different category of abuse than residential concrete — forklift traffic, pallet jacks, chemical spills, and the constant abrasion of heavy equipment on a surface that may have been poured years ago without any coating protection. Concrete Doctor installs commercial-grade epoxy flooring systems that are specifically engineered for industrial and light-industrial use, with topcoat thickness and aggregate options calibrated to the actual demands of the space.
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The commercial and industrial properties in Bennett and along the Adams County I-70 access corridor include agricultural equipment storage and service, light manufacturing, distribution, and small-business shops that have grown with the corridor's development over the past two decades. Many of these facilities were built on grade slabs designed for general use — adequate for the loads but not optimized for the chemical, moisture, and abrasion exposures that come with active commercial operations.
Bennett's high-plains location creates specific commercial floor challenges. Temperature swings between heated shop interiors and cold exterior approaches mean expansion joint management is critical — commercial slabs have more joints than residential, and those joints need proper flexible filler to prevent edge chipping under forklift tire loads. Moisture vapor from the clay soils below grade is a significant issue for agricultural storage buildings that may not have been designed with vapor barriers, and a commercial epoxy system installed without vapor mitigation will delaminate in a building where the slab is transpiring moisture from below.
Our Commercial & Warehouse Epoxy Flooring Approach
Concrete Doctor's commercial epoxy flooring installations use heavy-duty epoxy systems with topcoat thicknesses appropriate for the traffic category. Light commercial and retail spaces typically use the same systems as residential projects — multi-layer epoxy with a polyaspartic topcoat — while heavy industrial applications add additional epoxy build coats or incorporate industrial-grade aggregate for impact resistance. We work with the Westcoat commercial product line, which provides formulations for everything from light commercial to heavy forklift environments.
The preparation process for commercial floors is more intensive than residential work because the stakes of a disbonded coating in a high-traffic environment are higher. We use industrial shot-blasting or diamond grinding equipment appropriate for the square footage involved, clean and repair all cracks and joints, address moisture conditions, and stage the installation to minimize business downtime. We can work in sections — coating one half of a warehouse while operations continue on the other half — and we coordinate return-to-service timing with the business schedule so that vehicle and equipment traffic resumes on a fully cured surface.
Industrial Flooring Systems for Bennett's Agricultural and Warehouse Sector
Agricultural equipment dealerships, grain storage facilities, fertilizer distributors, and general contractor shops are part of the commercial fabric along the I-70 east corridor near Bennett. Each of these business types has specific floor demands. Equipment dealerships need floors that resist hydraulic fluid and petroleum products while providing a clean, professional appearance for the showroom area. Fertilizer and agricultural chemical storage needs floors with high chemical resistance and easy washdown capability. Contractor shops need floors that handle heavy equipment, tool drops, and abrasion without surface degradation.
We configure commercial epoxy systems to match these specific demands. Chemical-resistant topcoats, anti-static properties for electronics-sensitive storage, and enhanced slip resistance in areas where equipment brings in mud or water are all options we incorporate based on the actual use of the space. The point is that a commercial floor system should be designed for how the floor is actually used, not applied generically — and that's the conversation we have with every commercial client before we spec the project.
Minimizing Downtime During a Bennett Commercial Floor Installation
The practical challenge in commercial floor coating is always business continuity. A warehouse or shop can't typically be shut down for three days while a floor cures. Concrete Doctor plans commercial projects to minimize this disruption — we stage work in sections, schedule intensive prep phases outside business hours when possible, and use fast-cure polyaspartic topcoats that return floor sections to traffic within hours rather than days.
For larger Bennett commercial facilities, we develop a staging plan before the project starts: which sections are coated in which order, what the return-to-service timeline is for each section, and how equipment and material staging areas are managed during the project. This planning conversation is part of our commercial estimate process, not an afterthought. A commercial floor project that disrupts operations significantly is a problem regardless of how good the finished product is — we treat the business-continuity piece as seriously as the technical flooring work.
Serving Bennett, CO Since 1994
Concrete Doctor serves commercial clients throughout Adams County and the eastern Front Range from our Lakewood base. We understand the logistics of working in active commercial environments and the importance of getting the floor back in service on schedule. For warehouse and shop floors in Bennett that need assessment or are ready for a commercial coating project, call (303) 988-2558. We'll schedule a free on-site evaluation, assess the slab condition and moisture profile, and give you a commercial quote that covers the actual scope of work needed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, provided the coating system is specified correctly for forklift loads. Standard residential epoxy topcoats are too thin for heavy forklift traffic — we use commercial-grade systems with increased topcoat thickness and, in some cases, aggregate broadcast into the topcoat for additional surface hardness. The slab itself also needs to be assessed for any cracks or joints that could chip under forklift tires, and those need to be properly repaired before coating.
We handle commercial floor projects across a wide range of square footages, from small shop floors of a few hundred square feet to large warehouse installations. For very large projects, we bring in appropriate equipment and crew size to manage the scale — the prep equipment required for a 20,000-square-foot warehouse floor is different from a residential garage. We assess scope during the estimate and quote accordingly.
Control joints need to be properly addressed before coating, but the method depends on whether the joints are stable or still active. Active joints should be filled with a semi-rigid or flexible joint filler that holds the joint while still accommodating some movement — a rigid epoxy fill in an active joint will crack immediately under forklift loads. Stable joints can be filled more rigidly. We assess joint activity and specify the correct filler for each zone of the floor.
Last updated: June 2026
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