🏭 COMMERCIAL & WAREHOUSE EPOXY FLOORING

Commercial & Warehouse Epoxy Flooring in Dacono, CO

The stretch of commercial and light-industrial properties along Dacono's I-25 corridor and Highway 52 includes warehouses, distribution facilities, agricultural service buildings, and contractor yards that need flooring tough enough for real-world use — not a residential garage system scaled up. Concrete Doctor has been installing commercial epoxy flooring systems in Weld County and along the Front Range since 1994, with a full range of Westcoat industrial systems for facilities that see fork truck traffic, chemical exposure, and heavy operational demands.

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Commercial & Warehouse Epoxy Flooring for Dacono, CO Properties

Dacono's commercial base has grown alongside its residential expansion, and the mix of businesses in the area reflects Weld County's agricultural and energy heritage alongside newer light manufacturing and distribution operations. These facilities typically have concrete floors poured at industrial specifications — thicker slabs, heavier aggregate, wider control joint spacing — but they face the same Front Range climate stressors as any other concrete: mag chloride tracked in by vehicles from winter-treated roadways, freeze-thaw cycling in spaces that may be unheated or poorly heated, and the physical demands of heavy equipment and loaded pallet jacks. Uncoated industrial concrete floors in the Dacono area typically show accelerated wear compared to similar floors in more temperate climates. The combination of temperature swings, salt infiltration, and abrasive grit tracked in from Weld County's unpaved areas creates surface degradation that costs businesses in dust control, cleaning time, and eventual repair costs. A properly installed epoxy system extends the floor's service life and dramatically reduces ongoing maintenance burden.

Our Commercial & Warehouse Epoxy Flooring Approach

Concrete Doctor's commercial floor systems start with industrial-grade surface preparation appropriate to the scale and condition of the facility. For warehouses and production floors, that often means ride-on grinding equipment rather than walk-behind machines — faster, more consistent, and better suited to large floor areas. We test for moisture and address joint conditions before specifying the system, since commercial floors often have control joint spacing and traffic patterns that residential systems aren't designed for. For heavy-duty industrial applications, we install 100% solids epoxy base coats at thicker film builds than residential systems, followed by slip-resistant topcoats appropriate for the traffic type — fork trucks require different surface profiles than foot-traffic-only areas. We can apply epoxy broadcast systems with colored quartz or flake aggregate for areas that need both durability and appearance, and urethane cement or novolac epoxy systems for areas with chemical exposure, thermal shock, or food-grade requirements. Concrete Doctor coordinates scheduling to minimize business disruption, phasing large floors or working off-hours as needed.

Industrial Floor Systems for Weld County Facilities

Commercial and warehouse floors in Dacono face operational demands that require higher build systems than standard residential coatings. Fork truck wheel loads concentrate stress on the surface coating in ways that foot traffic doesn't — a thin residential epoxy will delaminate or wear through quickly under pallet jack traffic. Concrete Doctor specifies 100% solids epoxy at commercial film builds, which are measured in mils rather than applied in a single thin coat, to achieve the material thickness that handles rolling loads. For facilities handling agricultural chemicals, hydraulic fluids, or cleaning agents, system selection also considers chemical resistance. Standard epoxy performs well against most petroleum products and cleaning chemicals, but strong acids and solvents require novolac epoxy or urethane cement systems. We discuss your facility's specific chemical exposure profile during the estimate and select the system that fits, rather than defaulting to the same product regardless of use case.

Minimizing Downtime During Commercial Floor Installation

The biggest concern most Dacono facility managers have about floor coating projects isn't cost — it's business disruption. Concrete Doctor works with your operational schedule from the planning phase. Large facilities can be phased into sections so operations continue in uncoated areas while each section cures. For facilities that operate six or seven days a week, we schedule grinding and base coat on a Friday, broadcast and topcoat on a Saturday, and return to vehicle traffic by Monday morning with polyaspartic topcoat systems. We provide clear return-to-use timelines for each phase of the project and communicate proactively if conditions — weather, moisture levels, unforeseen slab prep — are going to affect the schedule. Commercial floor projects require coordination, and we've done enough of them to know how to keep the project moving without creating operational headaches.

Serving Dacono, CO Since 1994

Dacono and the surrounding Weld County commercial corridor is familiar territory for Concrete Doctor — we've worked in the industrial facilities along this stretch of the Front Range and understand the operational constraints that come with commercial flooring projects. We don't just apply the same residential system at a larger scale; we assess your facility's actual use case and specify accordingly. To start the conversation about your commercial floor, reach out at (303) 988-2558 for a free on-site evaluation and scope.

Frequently Asked Questions

Heavy fork truck traffic requires a system with adequate film build and hardness to resist wheel-path wear. We typically specify a 100% solids epoxy base coat at 10 to 15 mils dry film thickness with a polyurethane or polyaspartic topcoat. Joint treatment is equally important — unsupported joint edges chip under hard wheel traffic, and we armor critical joint edges with rigid filler before coating.
Yes, with proper phasing. We divide the floor into sections based on your operational layout, completing and curing one section before moving to the next. This requires planning around material storage, equipment parking areas, and traffic flow — we work through that logistics during the project planning phase before any grinding begins.
Application temperature matters more than use temperature — we won't apply coatings when slab surface temps are below 50°F, which rules out most winter installation in unheated spaces. Once cured, our commercial systems handle the temperature range found in Colorado warehouses without issue. We may recommend scheduling for spring or early fall to ensure proper cure conditions.
Yes, and it affects both system selection and application. Areas with regular water exposure benefit from a slope-to-drain correction if the existing floor is flat, and the topcoat should be a polyurethane or polyaspartic rather than standard epoxy for better water resistance. We evaluate drainage patterns and moisture sources during the site visit.

Last updated: June 2026

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