🏭 COMMERCIAL & WAREHOUSE EPOXY FLOORING
Commercial & Warehouse Epoxy Flooring in Gilcrest, CO
Commercial and warehouse floors in the Gilcrest area take punishment that residential floors never see — forklifts, pallet jacks, chemical spills, and continuous foot traffic on bare concrete that grinds down year after year. Concrete Doctor installs commercial-grade epoxy and polyaspartic floor systems for industrial, agricultural, and light commercial properties throughout Weld County. We've been doing this work since 1994, and we know how to specify systems that hold up in the real working conditions of northern Colorado facilities.
Westcoat Systems PartnerFamily-Owned Since 199430+ Years ExperienceFree Estimates
Commercial & Warehouse Epoxy Flooring for Gilcrest, CO Properties
Weld County's economy has a strong agricultural and energy extraction component, and many commercial properties near Gilcrest reflect that — equipment storage buildings, agricultural processing facilities, oilfield service shops, and light manufacturing operations on the outskirts of town. These facilities typically have large concrete slabs poured decades ago, often without surface treatment, that have been exposed to chemical drips, tire wear, and heavy loads throughout their service life.
The concrete in these settings faces challenges beyond normal wear. Ammonium nitrate and urea fertilizers used heavily in the agricultural sector are corrosive to unprotected concrete. Hydraulic and diesel fluids from oilfield equipment penetrate the surface and make cleaning difficult. And the same expansive soil conditions that affect residential slabs in the area also affect commercial floor slabs, sometimes producing cracking and joint widening in large, undivided warehouse floors that compound over time without repair.
Our Commercial & Warehouse Epoxy Flooring Approach
Concrete Doctor's commercial floor process scales from small shop floors to large industrial spaces. Surface preparation for commercial applications typically requires diamond grinding or shot blasting to achieve the CSP (concrete surface profile) needed for heavy-duty coating adhesion. Crack and joint repair is completed before coating, with repair materials selected for the movement and load characteristics of the specific floor area.
We install 100-percent solids epoxy systems, broadcast quartz or aggregate systems for high-traction requirements, and polyaspartic topcoat systems for facilities needing fast return to service. Commercial floor systems from our Westcoat lineup are formulated for chemical resistance, abrasion resistance, and the sustained impact of vehicle traffic. We also install line striping and safety markings as part of commercial floor projects — floor organization is a frequent request from warehouse and shop operators improving their facility layout.
Agricultural and Oilfield Facilities — Chemical Resistance Requirements
Standard residential epoxy formulations are not appropriate for commercial facilities that handle fertilizers, fuels, hydraulic fluids, or process chemicals. These environments require coating systems with specific chemical resistance ratings matched to the substances present. We ask about facility operations during the estimate process specifically to select formulations that resist the chemicals your floor will actually encounter.
For agricultural shops and storage buildings, polyurea and polyaspartic topcoat systems offer the best combination of chemical resistance, UV stability, and flexibility. They are also fast-curing — important when facilities cannot be taken out of service for extended periods. For facilities with chemical splash risk, we can extend the coating up walls and curbs to create containment, and we can design floor slopes and drains into the resurfacing scope where needed.
Line Striping and Floor Organization for Weld County Warehouses
Many commercial facilities in this area operate without meaningful floor organization — traffic lanes, storage zones, hazard markings, and equipment staging areas that improve safety and workflow. When we install a new epoxy or polyaspartic floor system, line striping and zone marking can be incorporated into the same project at relatively low incremental cost compared to a separate mobilization later.
We use commercial-grade two-component polyurethane line paint that bonds directly to the epoxy topcoat and resists the abrasion and chemical exposure of warehouse environments. Colors, widths, and symbols are customized to the facility's operational requirements. A well-marked floor improves OSHA compliance and day-to-day operational efficiency — a tangible return beyond the aesthetic improvement of the coating itself.
Serving Gilcrest, CO Since 1994
We regularly service commercial properties in Weld County and schedule larger commercial projects to minimize facility downtime — often working evenings, weekends, or phased sections to keep operations running. If your facility in or near Gilcrest has a concrete floor that's deteriorating or no longer serviceable, call (303) 988-2558 for a free commercial estimate. We'll assess the slab, identify what prep it needs, and give you a scope that accurately reflects the work required.
Frequently Asked Questions
Project duration depends on square footage, slab condition, and the coating system specified. A 5,000-square-foot warehouse floor in reasonable condition typically takes three to five days including prep, coating application, and curing time before traffic. We'll provide a detailed schedule with the estimate, including the downtime required for each phase.
Most commercial floor projects require the work area to be clear of equipment and inventory during prep and coating application. For large facilities, we can phase the work by sections if a full facility shutdown isn't feasible. We'll work with your schedule to minimize operational disruption.
It depends on the severity and type of cracking. Surface cracks and joint deterioration are normal candidates for repair prior to coating. Cracks with significant differential settlement between panels or evidence of ongoing sub-slab movement require assessment to determine whether the slab needs structural intervention before coating. We identify this during the estimate.
Slab surface temperature needs to be above 55°F for most epoxy systems, and the coating must not be applied within 5°F of the dew point. For facilities that are climate-controlled or can be temporarily heated, we can work outside the warm-weather window. Unheated facilities in northern Colorado are typically limited to May through September for exterior and unheated-space coating work.
Last updated: June 2026
Need Commercial & Warehouse Epoxy Flooring in Gilcrest, CO?
Get a free on-site estimate from Concrete Doctor — repair first, replacement only when necessary.
Repair first. Replacement only when necessary.