Westcoat Systems PartnerFamily-Owned Since 199430+ Years ExperienceFree Estimates
Commercial & Warehouse Epoxy Flooring for Frisco, CO Properties
Frisco's commercial landscape is shaped by its position as a Summit County hub between Dillon and Copper Mountain. The Main Street corridor serves year-round tourism with restaurants, shops, and lodges that cycle through thousands of visitors during peak ski and summer seasons. Loading and receiving areas for these businesses see significant pallet jack and hand-truck traffic over concrete slabs that, in many cases, have never been professionally coated or maintained. Back-of-house spaces in ski-town restaurants are particularly hard on floors — commercial kitchen environments combine chemical cleaning agents, extreme temperature swings from delivery bays opening in winter, moisture from ice storage and dishwashing, and constant foot traffic from crews in heavy boots.
Beyond the Main Street core, Frisco has commercial and light-industrial properties along Summit Boulevard and the areas near the I-70 interchange that house service businesses, equipment storage, and logistics operations. These facilities need flooring that can handle fork traffic, chemical spills, and the visual demands of commercial operations — not the decorative priorities of a hospitality space, but the functional requirements of a working floor.
Our Commercial & Warehouse Epoxy Flooring Approach
Concrete Doctor's commercial floor systems start with the same mechanical surface preparation used on residential projects — diamond grinding or shotblasting to remove contamination and open the concrete profile — but scaled to larger floor areas and tighter operational timelines. We understand that commercial spaces in Frisco have limited downtime, particularly during ski season, and we schedule work in phases or off-hours when necessary to avoid disrupting operations.
For commercial applications, we use high-build epoxy systems with sufficient mil thickness to provide chemical resistance, abrasion durability, and load-bearing capability under heavy equipment. For food-service environments — commercial kitchens, prep areas, walk-in cooler floors — we use FDA-compliant, non-porous systems with coved base details that eliminate the floor-wall crack where bacteria and moisture accumulate. For industrial or storage applications, we can incorporate safety markings, aisle designations, and hazard striping into the floor coating system, eliminating the need for adhesive tape that fails in wet mountain environments.
High-Solids Epoxy Systems for Summit County Commercial Traffic Loads
Standard residential epoxy products applied to commercial floors fail under equipment traffic — the mil thickness is simply inadequate for the point loads created by pallet jacks, dollies, and continuous foot traffic in steel-toed boots. Commercial-grade high-solids epoxy systems use significantly higher build rates — often 30 to 40 mils of total coating thickness versus 8 to 12 mils for residential — to provide the abrasion and impact resistance that commercial operations demand.
For Frisco's light-industrial and commercial-storage clients, we design floor systems based on the heaviest anticipated traffic: the weight per wheel of the equipment, the frequency of operation, and whether the equipment turns in place (which is particularly abrasive to coatings). A system designed for forklift traffic in a Summit County equipment storage facility needs compressive strength and bond strength that a restaurant floor system doesn't require. We size the specification to the actual use case rather than applying a one-size-fits-all commercial system.
Floor Coating and Health-Department Compliance for Frisco Food Service
Frisco's restaurant and hospitality sector is anchored by food-service environments that need to pass Summit County health inspections. Concrete floors in commercial kitchens, prep areas, and food-storage zones require non-porous surfaces that can be sanitized, and the floor-to-wall junction needs to be sealed to prevent moisture and bacteria accumulation in the crack. Bare or deteriorating concrete does not meet these standards and creates ongoing compliance exposure.
Concrete Doctor installs FDA-compliant epoxy systems with full-height coved bases in food-service environments. The cove is formed from epoxy mortar to create a seamless, sanitary curve from floor to wall — eliminating the 90-degree angle crack entirely. These systems are also chemical-resistant to commercial cleaning agents including quaternary ammonium compounds, bleach solutions, and degreasers used in professional kitchen cleaning protocols. We can complete most commercial kitchen floor projects over a weekend to minimize service interruption.