


Retail Floor Coatings in Lacey Township, NJ
Jersey Epoxy installs retail and storefront flooring across Lacey Township, Forked River, and Lanoka Harbor. Our seamless coatings take cart wheels, foot traffic, and tracked-in salt while staying sharp under store lighting. We grind the slab and repair cracks before we coat. Free on-site quotes.
- Diamond-ground prep
- Serving Ocean County
- 20+ years installing
- Free on-site quotes
- Diamond-Ground Prep
- Profiled, dry, and sound first
- Homes & Businesses
- Residential and commercial systems
- 20+ Years Experience
- Floor coatings across NJ & eastern PA
- Free On-Site Survey
- A written spec and a firm number
Lacey Township up close
What a Lacey Township retail floor is up against
A retail sales floor takes constant cart and foot traffic. On Route 9 in Forked River it also takes the road salt and grit dragged in off the lot all winter, while the slab below works through 30 to 40 freeze-thaw cycles a year. For sales floors and entries we lean on polyaspartic and high-build epoxy: they resist abrasion, clean up fast, and hold a slip-resistant finish where shoppers track in water and salt. For back-of-house prep areas or any space that needs a sanitary, washdown-rated surface, we finish in resinous.
On a retail slab the real threat to the coating is moisture pushing up through the concrete, and that risk runs high near the Barnegat Bay lagoon grids in Lanoka Harbor and Forked River, where slabs sit low and many streets flooded during Sandy. The floor has to be dry and sound before it takes a finish, so on those low-lying lots near the water a moisture test is worth doing first. Either way, we grind the slab to a clean profile and repair cracks before any coating goes down.
Our approach
How we build retail floor coatings in Lacey Township
No single approach fits every retail floor. Here is what goes into a retail floor coatings that lasts in Lacey Township.
Why prep wins
A Lacey Township retail floor lasts or fails before the first coat
Most retail floor coatings that fail were not beaten by the wrong product. They were rolled over a dusty or damp slab the coating could never bond to. For a retail floor in Lacey Township, we diamond-grind to a clean profile, repair the cracks and pitting, and make sure the slab is dry and sound before anything goes down.
From there we match the system to the retail floor: Epoxy Flooring or Polished Concrete, specified for what this floor actually has to take. The prep is the same rigor every time; the system follows the job.
- Diamond-ground to a clean profile so the coating keys into sound concrete, not a dusty top layer. [ICRI CSP]
- Cracks and pitting repaired and joints honored, so the finish does not telegraph the slab beneath it.
- Dry, sound slab first, the top cause of coating failure, so a moisture test is worth doing where the water table runs high.
- System matched to the retail floor, not one coating used 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
- Grind & repair
- Dry, sound slab
- Epoxy Flooring
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
Why Lacey Township chooses our retail floor coatings
Tough Walk-Off Entry
Anti-slip aggregate at the door, the most abrasive and slippery spot in the building.
Seamless Sales Floor
A high-build floor down the aisles so the busy lanes wear like the rest of the store.
Receiving-Dock Durable
A forklift-rated build for stockrooms and receiving behind the sales floor.
Mops Clean
A non-porous, seamless surface with no grout lines for dirt to collect in.
No Lost Selling Days
We pour overnight and use fast-cure systems so the store reopens by morning.
Recommended system
The systems we use for retail floors
The chemistry we reach for on a Lacey Township retail floor, and why.

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
Polished Concrete
A hard, low-maintenance, light-reflective finish for large retail and warehouse footprints, densifying and sealing 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
Retail Floor Coatings in Lacey Township, answered
How long until our store can reopen after the floor is coated?
It depends on the system. Polyaspartic cures fast and is typically walkable within a day, which makes it the usual pick for sales floors and entries where downtime costs you. High-build epoxy and resinous take longer to fully cure. We schedule around your hours and lay out the timeline on the on-site quote so you know exactly when the space is ready for traffic.
Will the floor hold up to carts, salt, and heavy foot traffic?
Yes. We finish retail floors in polyaspartic and high-build epoxy specifically because they resist abrasion from cart wheels and stand up to the road salt and grit tracked in off Route 9 all winter. We also build in a slip-resistant texture at entries where shoppers bring in water and salt.
Our building is near the bay and has flooded before. Can you still coat the slab?
Often yes, but the slab has to be dry and sound first, because moisture rising through the concrete is the top cause of coating failure. On low lagoon and bayfront lots in Lanoka Harbor and Forked River that have flooded, we recommend a moisture test before committing to a system. We grind to profile and repair cracks first either way.
Get started
Get a free quote on your Lacey Township retail floor
We walk the retail floor at no cost, read the slab, and come back with a written spec and a firm number for your Lacey Township retail floor coatings.
(877) 376-9965 · talk to an installerRated 5 stars by New Jersey homeowners & businesses
Powered by Google