A bare industrial floor slab in North Texas takes a beating from forklift traffic, chemical spills, and the sheer volume of dust that expansive Collin County clay kicks up during a dry summer. We apply epoxy, polyaspartic, and sealant coatings to the floors and site concrete we pour, and we take standalone coating work on existing slabs that need a protective finish without a full floor replacement.

Inside the building, that means broadcast or solid-color epoxy systems for warehouse and light-manufacturing floors where chemical resistance and easy cleanup matter, polyaspartic topcoats where a faster cure time is worth the added cost for a facility that cannot afford extended downtime, and moisture-vapor barrier primers on slabs poured over grade in areas with high water tables near creek corridors north of the Tollway. We test slab moisture before any coating goes down, since a coating applied over a slab that has not cured or dried sufficiently will delaminate within months regardless of how well it was installed.

Outside, we paint and seal curbs, wheel stops, and site concrete around loading docks and truck courts, both for visibility and to protect exposed edges from spalling under freeze-thaw cycles, which North Texas gets more of than most people expect given the region's reputation for mild winters. We also coordinate anti-slip additives for ramps and dock approaches where OSHA and insurance carriers expect documented slip-resistance measures, a detail that gets missed often on speculative buildings finished quickly ahead of a tenant improvement schedule.

For general contractors managing a Frisco or Prosper industrial build, we schedule coatings as the trailing scope behind our own floor pour, keeping moisture testing, surface prep, and coating application inside one accountable crew instead of introducing a separate flooring subcontractor with a different schedule and a different set of assumptions about slab readiness.