


Epoxy Flooring in Cranbury, NJ
The Exit 8A corridor in and around Cranbury is one of the largest big-box distribution markets in the country, with Prologis, Pearson, Wayfair, and Amazon among the names on the slabs. Jersey Epoxy installs forklift-rated warehouse floors on these million-square-foot slabs, phased around active shipping. Free on-site quotes.
- Forklift-rated systems
- Serving Middlesex County
- 20+ years installing
- Phased around your hours
- Sized to Your Traffic
- Build matched to forklift point loads
- Phased Around Operations
- We coat one zone while the rest runs
- 20+ Years Experience
- Industrial & commercial installs
- Free On-Site Survey
- A per-area spec and a firm number
Cranbury up close
What a Cranbury commercial floor is up against
Cranbury’s small historic village sits next to one of the biggest warehouse markets in the Northeast. The Exit 8A corridor along Route 130, in and around Cranbury, holds tens of millions of square feet of big-box distribution, with Prologis Park Cranbury, Pearson, Wayfair, and Amazon among the names on the slabs. These are forklift floors first: high-build epoxy sized to lift-truck point loads, hot-tire-resistant topcoats at the dock doors, and dust control across acres of concrete.
Where a tenant handles electronics we can specify static-control flooring, and cold-storage and food or pharma distribution floors get sanitary, washdown-rated systems. On slabs this large, moisture is a real variable, so a relative-humidity moisture test before coating is worth doing and we phase the install bay by bay so the building keeps shipping.
Zone-by-zone
We spec each area of the building for the job it actually does
No single coating is right everywhere. Here is how we read a commercial floor and match the chemistry to the punishment.
Why prep wins
The floor lasts or fails on what happens before the first coat
Most failed floors in New Jersey were not beaten by the wrong resin. They were rolled over a dusty or damp slab that the coating could never bond to. We diamond-grind every floor to a clean profile, repair the cracks and pitting, and make sure the slab is dry and sound before anything goes down.
From there the system is matched to the room: a forklift-rated high-build epoxy for a warehouse aisle, a washdown-rated resinous floor for a kitchen or food space, a polished or sealed slab for retail. The prep is the same rigor every time; the system changes with the load.
- Diamond-ground to profile so the primer keys into sound concrete, not a dusty top layer. [ICRI CSP]
- Dry, sound slab before the first coat, the single most common cause of early delamination, so a moisture test is worth doing where the slab could be wet. [ASTM F2170]
- Cracks and pitting repaired and joints honored, so the finish does not telegraph the slab beneath it.
- System matched to the load, from flake garages to forklift-rated warehouse floors, instead of one coating everywhere.
How it works
From your first call to the final coat
We map the whole job before we touch the floor, then phase the work around your production.
- Free Quote(877) 376-9965No-cost on-site assessmentGet my quote
Call or Contact Us
Tell us about the space and your timeline.
- Walk-through
- Warehouse
- Docks
- Retail
On-Site Survey
A free walk-through and a written floor spec.
- Slab PrepProfiledDry & sound
Preparation
Slab diamond-ground and prepped to dry, sound concrete before coating.
- Sealed
Installation
Seamless system installed and sealed.
Standards & specifications
Held to the standards a coating is actually tested against
Every floor answers to load, slip, adhesion, and moisture before it answers to looks. Here is each requirement and the published standard we hold the spec to.
Slab moisture
Older NJ and PA slabs often have no vapor barrier, and vapor pushing up from an unbarriered slab is the leading reason a coating lets go from underneath. The slab has to be dry and sound before we coat, and on a high-water-table or below-grade slab a moisture test (ASTM F2170 or F1869) is worth doing first. [ASTM F2170 / F1869]
Surface profile & adhesion
We diamond-grind the slab to a concrete surface profile that the primer can key into, so the coating bonds to sound concrete rather than to a dusty top layer. Pull-off adhesion is measured to ASTM D7234. [ICRI CSP / ASTM D7234]
Slip resistance (wet)
Anti-slip aggregate broadcast into entries, ramps, and any area that gets wet, dialed toward the ANSI A326.3 wet DCOF benchmark of 0.42. Texture is set area by area, and no wet floor is ever fully slip-proof. [ANSI A326.3]
Compressive & abrasion strength
Industrial epoxies and resinous mortars carry compressive strengths well above plain concrete (ASTM C579) and resist abrasion under Taber testing (ASTM D4060), matched to the traffic the floor actually takes. [ASTM C579 / D4060]
These targets are met by the systems we install and the products we specify into them. Jersey Epoxy is the installer, not a certifying body, so we point to the standard on the spec rather than calling ourselves certified.
What you get
A Cranbury commercial floor that takes the traffic and the washdown
Forklift-rated distribution floors for the Exit 8A big-box corridor, with ESD, cold-storage, and food or pharma systems where the tenant needs them, phased around shipping.
Forklift & Point-Load Durability
We match the wear layer to your forklift, pallet-jack, and racking loads so the drive aisles hold up instead of chipping where the wheels turn.
Hot-Tire-Pickup Resistance
Hard polyaspartic and urethane topcoats near the dock doors stop warm forklift and truck tires from grabbing and lifting the coating.
Washdown & Chemical Resistance
Seamless resinous floors take a daily washdown and shrug off oils, food acids, and the odd spill instead of soaking them into the slab.
Moisture Tested First
We read every slab with ASTM moisture methods before coating, because vapor from an unbarriered slab is the top cause of early delamination.
Phased Around Operations
We section the building and coat one zone while the rest keeps running, working nights and weekends with fast-cure topcoats.
Recommended systems
The systems we reach for in commercial work
The three systems that carry most commercial and industrial jobs, with the chemistry behind each.

Epoxy Flooring
A hard, high-build base sized to forklift and point loads: the workhorse for warehouse aisles, dock approaches, and shop floors.
Explore system
Resinous Flooring
Seamless, chemical-resistant, and non-porous: it takes a washdown and shrugs off oils and spills in kitchens, labs, and food spaces.
Explore system
Polished Concrete
A hard, low-maintenance, light-reflective finish for big retail and warehouse footprints where you densify and seal the existing slab.
Explore systemProudly Serving New Jersey & Eastern PA
Our crews are on the road daily. Select your region to see our coverage.
New Jersey
Statewide Coverage- Bergen & Essex County
- Monmouth & Ocean County
- Middlesex & Somerset County
- Camden & Burlington County
- Hudson & Morris County
FAQ
Epoxy flooring in Cranbury, answered straight
Can you coat a million-square-foot DC without stopping operations?
Yes. We phase the work bay by bay, coating one section while the rest keeps shipping, with fast-cure forklift-rated systems and overnight or weekend work.
Will the floor take heavy forklift traffic?
It is built for it. We size the high-build epoxy to your lift-truck point loads and use a hot-tire-resistant topcoat at the dock doors where warm tires would otherwise lift a softer film.
We handle electronics, cold storage, or food.
We can specify static-control (ESD) flooring for electronics, cold-rated systems for freezers, and sanitary washdown floors for food or pharma distribution.
Which towns near Cranbury do you serve?
Cranbury, Monroe, South Brunswick, East Windsor, Hightstown, Jamesburg, and Plainsboro.
Get started
Let us spec a floor for your Cranbury project
We walk the space at no cost, read the slab, and come back with a written spec and a firm number.
(877) 376-9965 · talk to an installerRated 5 stars by New Jersey homeowners & businesses
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