✨ EPOXY & QUARTZ FLOORING

Epoxy & Quartz Flooring in Rand, CO

Epoxy and quartz broadcast flooring systems deliver a combination of hardness, slip resistance, and visual appeal that bare concrete simply can't match — especially in North Park's punishing climate. Concrete Doctor installs Westcoat epoxy and quartz systems on residential and commercial floors throughout the Jackson County area, sizing the product and prep to what the slab and the space actually need.

Westcoat Systems PartnerFamily-Owned Since 199430+ Years ExperienceFree Estimates

Epoxy & Quartz Flooring for Rand, CO Properties

At Rand's elevation, concrete slabs are exposed to an extreme thermal range over the course of a single year. A garage floor that bakes under high-altitude summer sun and then endures deep mountain-cold winters is under constant dimensional stress. Uncoated slabs absorb moisture, harbor road salts tracked in from Highway 125 and rural roads, and develop a chalky, dusty surface that gets worse with each freeze-thaw cycle. Quartz broadcast systems bond to the slab at the chemistry level — they don't sit on top of the concrete like a paint, they cross-link with it, which is what makes them durable under movement and temperature swing. Properties in the Rand area often include larger working spaces — garages, mudrooms, utility rooms, and outbuildings where a slip-resistant, cleanable surface genuinely matters. Jackson County's wet springs bring snowmelt and mud indoors constantly, and a quartz-broadcast floor with a textured top coat handles that reality far better than sealed or uncoated concrete. The aggregate surface also holds traction even when wet, which matters when work boots are coming in from a snowy yard.

Our Epoxy & Quartz Flooring Approach

Concrete Doctor's epoxy and quartz installations follow a strict surface preparation protocol. We mechanically profile the slab — typically by diamond grinding — to open the concrete's pores and remove any existing sealers, oils, or surface contamination. Without proper prep, no coating system bonds adequately long-term, and at altitude where temperature cycling is severe, adhesion failures happen faster and more completely than in milder climates. We inspect for moisture vapor transmission before coating, because in North Park's climate, vapor barriers under older slabs are often absent or degraded. We use Westcoat epoxy base coats broadcast with colored quartz aggregate, followed by a UV-stable polyurethane or polyaspartic topcoat. The polyaspartic finish is particularly well-suited for high-altitude mountain properties — it cures across a wide temperature range (important when working in an unheated garage during Colorado shoulder seasons) and maintains color stability under intense UV without the amber yellowing that standard epoxy topcoats develop. The result is a floor that's monolithic, seamless, and built to handle whatever Jackson County throws at it.

Why Quartz Broadcast Systems Outperform Plain Epoxy on Mountain Properties

A straight epoxy coating — without aggregate broadcast — leaves a surface that's smooth, hard, and somewhat slippery when wet. In a residential mudroom in Denver that might be acceptable, but in a working garage in North Park where you're walking in from wet ground or snowy conditions, the traction difference matters. Quartz aggregate broadcasts give the finished floor a consistent grip profile across the entire surface, and the hard quartz particles themselves add abrasion resistance that a smooth epoxy can't match. The layered system also provides better resistance to impact and point loads — heavy equipment, jacks, dropped tools — that garage and shop floors in rural Colorado take regularly. Where a single-coat epoxy might chip under a sharp impact, the quartz broadcast system distributes the stress. For working properties in Jackson County, that durability difference is real and practical.

Color, Texture, and Finish Options for Jackson County Homes

Quartz and epoxy systems aren't purely functional — they can completely transform the look of a floor. We offer a range of quartz aggregate colors and blending options, and the polyaspartic topcoat comes in matte or satin finishes to match the character of the space. Rand properties tend to lean toward practical aesthetics — clean, durable, and low-maintenance rather than high-gloss showroom — and we have options that fit that sensibility perfectly. For homeowners finishing a basement or utility space for the first time, the improvement from bare concrete to a seamless quartz system is dramatic: no more dust, no more moisture staining, a surface that reflects light and makes the space feel finished. We'll bring samples to your estimate visit so you can see actual colors in your space before committing.

Serving Rand, CO Since 1994

We've made the drive to North Park for concrete jobs before, and we'll make it for yours. Rand is about 70 miles from our Lakewood shop, and the distance doesn't change how we work — same prep, same Westcoat materials, same repair-first assessment before we coat anything. If you've been putting off doing something about a worn, dusty, or deteriorating floor, give us a call at (303) 988-2558 and we'll come out, look at the slab, and tell you exactly what a quartz or epoxy system would involve for your specific space.

Frequently Asked Questions

Polyaspartic topcoats cure across a much wider temperature range than standard epoxy, making them suitable for application in Colorado mountain garages during fall or early spring. However, there are minimum surface and ambient temperature thresholds we need to meet for the chemistry to work correctly. We'll assess conditions before scheduling your installation and won't coat a slab that won't cure properly.
A properly prepared and installed Westcoat quartz system with a polyaspartic topcoat will typically last 10-20 years or more under normal residential or light commercial use. The single biggest factor in longevity is surface preparation — a poorly prepped slab will delaminate regardless of the coating brand. We don't skip prep to lower upfront cost.
Yes. A properly cured polyaspartic topcoat over an epoxy-quartz system creates a chemically resistant surface that handles salt and de-icing chemicals well. The key is that the coating is seamless — there are no gaps for salt solution to penetrate to the bare concrete below. Regular sweeping and occasional mopping is all the maintenance required.
In most cases, yes — any active cracks, spalling, or delaminating areas need to be addressed before coating. Coating over deteriorating concrete traps the problem and accelerates failure. We repair what needs repairing as part of the prep process, and we're transparent about that scope during the estimate.

Last updated: June 2026

Need Epoxy & Quartz Flooring in Rand, CO?

Get a free on-site estimate from Concrete Doctor — repair first, replacement only when necessary.

Repair first. Replacement only when necessary.