Commercial-grade polyaspartic and polyurea systems built for warehouses, showrooms, and shops that take real abuse. Installed in Aurora by our verified Denver crew with a Limited 15 Year Warranty on every floor.
Aurora is the Denver metro's second-largest city and one of Colorado's most commercially diverse municipalities, a 154-square-mile market that spans everything from mid-century Colfax corridor strip commercial to the modern mixed-use development at Southlands and the multi-million-square-foot Fitzsimons medical campus. Industrial and logistics tenants cluster along Peoria Street, Havana Street, and the I-70 east corridor. Auto service facilities line Colfax and Iliff. Medical and dental offices concentrate around Fitzsimons and the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. Retailers, restaurants, and personal-service operators occupy strip centers and lifestyle centers from Aurora Mall to Southlands. Every category of Aurora commercial floor faces the same Front Range concrete challenges: bentonite-influenced subgrades capable of differential slab movement, freeze-thaw cycling at 5,400 feet, intense high-altitude UV that degrades unprotected surfaces faster than coastal markets, and magnesium-chloride deicers tracked in from I-225, E-470, Colfax, Havana, and Peoria. A commercial-grade polyaspartic or polyurea floor coating system addresses each variable at the chemistry level.
Aurora's commercial inventory reflects its size and its history as an independent city rather than a suburb. The Colfax corridor west of Peoria retains older commercial buildings with 1960s and 1970s slab pours, concrete that has absorbed decades of foot traffic, vehicle fluids, and moisture cycling. These slabs typically require the most intensive preparation: diamond grinding to remove surface laitance and contamination, crack routing and polyurea fill on visible damage, and moisture-vapor emission testing to quantify transmission before coating selection.
The Havana and Peoria Street corridors serve as Aurora's primary auto and fleet service corridors. Dealership service bays, independent mechanics, fleet maintenance operators, and wholesale auto parts facilities line these routes. Floor coatings for these environments must resist petroleum products, hydraulic fluid, brake fluid, and the tire-scuff stress of heavy-duty vehicle traffic. Polyaspartic systems with Shore D hardness ratings appropriate for commercial mechanical environments are the specification for these facilities.
Aurora's eastern edge, centered on the E-470 toll corridor and the Southlands lifestyle center, represents the city's newest commercial construction. Slab pours in this area are younger and generally better controlled, but altitude-driven UV exposure and deicer brine from E-470 and Smoky Hill Road are immediate threats to any uncoated surface. Retail, restaurant, and medical tenants in this zone benefit from the same coating chemistry despite the newer substrate.
The Fitzsimons medical campus and University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus on Aurora's northwest side have catalyzed significant medical and life-science commercial development along Colfax between Peoria and Potomac. Clinic floors, dental suites, imaging center corridors, laboratory spaces, and outpatient facility waiting areas in this zone require finishes that satisfy practical performance and infection-control requirements: non-porous surfaces that resist chemical cleaner penetration, color-stable topcoats that hold appearance through repeated disinfectant mopping, and slip-resistance appropriate for patient-traffic areas.
Polyaspartic topcoats cure to a non-porous sealed surface that standard hospital-grade disinfectants do not degrade. The chemical resistance of a properly installed polyaspartic system covers the quaternary ammonium compounds, bleach-based cleaners, and enzymatic detergents commonly used in healthcare environments. The slip-resistance aggregate specified for medical installations provides traction when floors are wet from cleaning, a critical factor in patient-safety planning.
Laboratory and compounding spaces in the Fitzsimons corridor may also require anti-static dissipative flooring in specific zones. Site assessment for these facilities includes identifying zones where static buildup creates equipment or safety risk, allowing the installation specification to include dissipative broadcast layers where the floor plan requires them.
Aurora's industrial base runs along I-70 east of Peoria, including the Stapleton-adjacent industrial zone, the Montebello Business Park, and the large-format distribution and logistics facilities that have developed along the DIA access corridors. These properties handle forklift traffic, pallet rack systems with point loads that concentrate stress at column bases, and in some cases chemical storage or processing that demands solvent-resistant coating systems.
Industrial floor specifications for Aurora logistics facilities prioritize abrasion resistance and impact tolerance. Polyurea broadcast systems with quartz or aluminum oxide aggregate provide the surface hardness needed to withstand forklift wheels, pallet jacks, and the dragging of heavy freight. Joint treatment at control joints and construction joints in warehouse slabs is a required step before coating: these joints must be routed and filled with semi-rigid polyurea that allows thermal movement without cracking the coating film at the joint edge.
Aurora's temperature range from summer highs above 95 degrees Fahrenheit to winter lows below zero creates thermal cycling stress that industrial coatings must accommodate across the full service life. Polyurea and polyaspartic systems tolerate a working temperature range that conventional epoxy systems do not match, making them the appropriate choice for unheated warehouse sections, loading docks, and exterior-adjacent spaces where temperatures fluctuate dramatically with the seasons.
Most Aurora commercial facilities cannot accept a multi-day full shutdown for flooring. Retailers lose sales. Restaurants lose covers. Auto service bays lose vehicle throughput. Medical clinics cannot interrupt patient scheduling. Phased installation divides the floor area into sections and sequences the work so that a portion of the facility remains operational throughout. A restaurant, for example, might coat the kitchen and prep areas during a weekend when dining room service continues, then return to coat the dining room in a subsequent phase when the kitchen is back in service.
Aurora's extended daylight in summer and accessible road network across I-225, I-70, and E-470 make early-morning and overnight installation scheduling practical. Work that begins at midnight can reach walk-on cure by the following morning, and the facility can open on schedule. This scheduling flexibility is particularly valuable for Fitzsimons-area medical tenants whose patient appointment commitments make daytime access unavailable.
Contact Amazing Garage Floors to schedule the free on-site assessment for your Aurora commercial property. The assessment covers slab condition, moisture-vapor emission reading, traffic load requirements, and a phased scheduling plan that fits your operational calendar. The assessment itself carries no obligation.
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