5X’s Stronger Than Epoxy — (617) 207-6300

5X’s Stronger Than Epoxy  •  One Day Installation  •  15 Year Warranty

Commercial Kitchen Floor Coatings
Marlborough MA

Looking for help with Commercial Kitchen Floor Coatings in Marlborough, MA?

Are you a Chef? Business Owner? Property Manager? Or maybe someone from Marlborough just looking for more information on Commercial Kitchen Floor Coatings services?

You’re in the right place…

Problem:

We all know that commercial kitchens can be a mess. Grease, grime and spills are inevitable in the fast paced environment of any kitchen.
But some types of flooring just don’t cut it for these high traffic areas. Concrete is inexpensive, but hard to clean and prone to cracking when exposed to grease or moisture over time.

Solution:

Polyurea concrete coatings from Idea Concrete Coatings are the perfect solution for your restaurant’s floors! Our polyurea coating will protect against water damage and staining while also providing slip resistance across your flooring surface so that you can keep things running smoothly at all times!

Why Choose

Idea Concrete Coatings for Commercial Kitchen Floor Coatings Services in Marlborough MA?

Because we have a reputation for quality work at a fair price. Our customer service is second to none. Our team is always responsive, courteous, friendly, and respectful.

Idea Concrete Coatings’ Commercial Kitchen Floor Coatings services have helped hundreds of Business Owners, Property Managers and other individuals in Marlborough, MA and the surrounding communities. After some research, we’re confident you’ll find us to be the right Polyurea Flooring Contractor to handle your Commercial Kitchen Floor Concrete Coatings projects.

With Idea Concrete Coatings, you’ll receive:

  • Quality workmanship that is guaranteed to last
  • Work from professionals who are honest and hardworking
  • Dependable service that is completed on time and on budget
  • Financing options to help fund your concrete coating project
  • Free estimates and a fully insured crew

Marlborough, MA

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Benefits of
Commercial Kitchen Floor Coatings:

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Extremely Durable

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Scratch-Resistant

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Waterproof

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High Gloss Finish

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Fast-Curing

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Easily Maintained

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UV-stable / Fadeproof

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Many Color Options

5X STRONGER THAN EPOXY

Tired Of Constantly Scrubbing And Cleaning Your Commercial Kitchen Floors?

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Polyurea is the perfect solution. It’s an easy-to-apply, durable coating that will protect your floor from spills and stains. You can also use it in other areas of your commercial property like loading docks, walkways, and more.

It’s not just about protecting your floors from damage – polyurea also provides a beautiful finish that will make any space look better than ever before! And because it’s so easy to apply, you can have this new look in no time at all! Get started today with our free quote form or call us now. We are here to help you find the best solution for your needs.

Avoid Cracking Due To The Fluctuating Massachusetts Temperatures With Polyurea Floor Coatings

Coating your concrete with polyurea ensures that the surface of the floor will not crack or deteriorate because it’s elastic and expands when exposed to a change in temperature. This is crucial for contractors who are working on large commercial projects where an entire structure can start to break down due to choosing the wrong protective coating.

Polyurea is the coating that lasts. Studies have shown concrete’s propensity to crack when temperature changes cause it to expand and contract, paving a way for its deterioration. Polyurea expands and contracts with your flooring surface ensuring no cracks will form within the first winter of use – which can be disastrous.

OUR PROCESS

24 Hour Floor Installation

STEP

Concrete Preparation

STEP

Concrete Repairs

STEP

Base Coat Application

STEP

Spread Colored Flakes

STEP

Final Preparation

STEP

High Gloss Finish

What is Polyurea Concrete Coating?

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Polyurea floor coating is the toughest and fastest-curing form of concrete protection you can buy. Once applied, it’s shiny finish will last for years without any cracking or peeling if maintained properly. It can withstand more abuse and impact than any traditional epoxy coating, offers much better protection against harmful agents like oils, chemicals, and gas, and doesn’t stain, crack, or peel. Choose from hundreds of color schemes and looks to fit the style of any room inside or outside. Polyurea commercial kitchen floors are a solid choice when considering your options to protect your kitchen floors from wear and tear. If you decide to use polyurea floor coating, your floors will look gleaming and new for many years to come, if maintained properly.

Why Choose Polyurea Floor Coating For Your Commercial Kitchen Floors

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1. Polyurea Coatings Withstand Everything

These top-quality floors can withstand all kinds of harmful impacts, extreme pressure, and chemical attacks. Due to its strength and durability these are often applied in commercial or industrial facilities that require heavy duty flooring materials due to their ability with immense temperature resistance. These sustainable products contain no volatile organic compounds (VOCs), which means they’re safe from the risks associated with indoor air pollution caused by chemicals like formaldehyde.

2. Polyurea Coatings Are Tough & Fast-Curing

This Commercial Kitchen floor coating is super strong and resistant, taking only one day to install. Conveniently fast-curing in just 1-2 hours after application, this kind of surface will be ready for use in the next 24 hours! If you’re considering a professional contractor’s services, then your decision has already been made – because Idea Concrete Coatings gives you an excellent product that takes less than 1 day to install.

3. Easy To Maintain And Look Amazing 

Polyurea floor coatings are beautiful, easy to clean, and a non-bubbling polymer with a crystal-clear finish. These qualities make them perfect for Commercial Kitchen concrete floors as they provide outstanding protection and prevent insects from hiding in cracks or crevices. With no place to hide, these hardy creatures will be scared off by the smooth surface of your newly coated floor which can also withstand everyday wear and tear.

4. Your Kitchen Is Safer With Polyurea

Polyurea coated floors are the safest option for any space. The coating creates a non-slip surface that is great for slippery surfaces, and it can withstand very high temperatures to provide fire retardant protection. Unlike epoxy floor coatings, polyurethane doesn’t emit harmful VOCs; they’re antibacterial and nontoxic as well!

5. Many Colors To Choose From

Commercial Kitchen floors are usually dull and gray, but now there is a lot more to offer for those who want something different. You can have decorative chips in your floor coating or you could opt for multiple colors that will make any Commercial Kitchen space unique. Whatever option you choose, it won’t matter because the options are durable and strong enough to last many years ahead!

Elias De Lana Owner Idea Concrete Coatings Medfield MA 325px

Elias De Lana

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Talk To The Owner

We understand that sometimes you just want to talk before scheduling an estimate.

We'll gladly help with any questions or concerns.

(617) 207-6300

Problems With Other Commercial Kitchen Floor Coating Solutions Like Epoxy

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Not only do other coatings start to crack and flake after a handful of winters, but they don’t do well in sunny weather either! This should be an important drawback for any contractor developing buildings with stone flooring, or anyone working in areas that have many painted driveways. Even if epoxy coatings hold up to protect the surface of your floors from UV rays, it will still deteriorate over time when exposed to natural light. Your beautiful floors might take on a yellow tinge if there is too much sun exposure- which could happen anywhere without enough shade coverage during the summer months. However this can all change depending on whether you use Polyurea Concrete Coatings!

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Map of Marlborough
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Marlborough Overview
Marlborough, Massachusetts
City
Main street

Main street
Official seal of Marlborough, Massachusetts

Location in Middlesex County in Massachusetts

Location in Middlesex County in Massachusetts
Marlborough, Massachusetts is located in the United States

Marlborough, Massachusetts
Marlborough, Massachusetts
Location in the United States
Coordinates:

42°20′45″N 71°33′10″W / 42.34583°N 71.55278°W / 42.34583; -71.55278Coordinates: 42°20′45″N 71°33′10″W / 42.34583°N 71.55278°W / 42.34583; -71.55278

Country United States
State Massachusetts
County Middlesex
Settled 1657
Incorporated (town) September 20, 1660
Incorporated (city) 1890
Government

 • Type Mayor-council city
 • Mayor Arthur G. Vigeant
Area

 • Total 22.10 sq mi (57.23 km2)
 • Land 20.86 sq mi (54.03 km2)
 • Water 1.24 sq mi (3.20 km2)
Elevation

450 ft (137 m)
Population

 (2020)
 • Total 41,793
 • Density 2,003.50/sq mi (773.51/km2)
Demonym(s) Marlboronian
Time zone UTC−5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST) UTC−4 (Eastern)
ZIP Code
01752
Area code(s) 508/774
FIPS code 25-38715
GNIS feature ID 0611360
Website www.marlborough-ma.gov

Marlborough is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. The population was 41,793 at the 2020 census. Marlborough became a prosperous industrial town in the 19th century and made the transition to high technology industry in the late 20th century after the construction of the Massachusetts Turnpike.

Marlborough was declared a town in 1660. It was incorporated as a city in 1890 when it changed its municipal charter from a New England town meeting system to a mayor–council government.

About Marlborough, MA

History

John Howe in 1656 was a fur trader and built a house at the intersection of two Indian trails, Nashua Trail and Connecticut path. He could speak the language of the Algonquian Indians though the local tribe referred to themselves as the Pennacooks. The settlers were welcomed by the Indians because they protected them from other tribes they were at war with. In the 1650s, several families left the nearby town of Sudbury, 18 miles west of Boston, to start a new town. The village was named after Marlborough, the market town in Wiltshire, England. It was first settled in 1657 by 14 men led by Edmund Rice, John Ruddock, John Howe and a third John named John Bent ; in 1656 Rice and his colleagues petitioned the Massachusetts General Court to create the town of Marlborough and it was officially incorporated in 1660. Rice was elected a selectman at Marlborough in 1657. Sumner Chilton Powell wrote, in Puritan Village: The Formation of a New England Town, “Not only did Rice become the largest individual landholder in Sudbury, but he represented his new town in the Massachusetts legislature for five years and devoted at least eleven of his last fifteen years to serving as selectman and judge of small causes.”

The Reverend William Brimstead was the first minister of the Puritan church and Johnathan Johnson was the first blacksmith.

Marlborough was one of the seven “Praying Indian Towns” because they were converted to Christianity by the Rev. John Eliot of Roxbury. In 1674 a deed was drawn up dividing the land between the settlers and the natives. This is the only record of names of the natives.

The settlement was almost destroyed by Native Americans in 1676 during King Philip’s War.

In 1711 Marlborough’s territory included Northborough, Southborough, Westborough and Hudson. As population, business, and travel grew in the colonies, Marlborough became a favored rest stop on the Boston Post Road. Many travelers stopped at its inns and taverns, including George Washington, who visited the Williams Tavern soon after his inauguration in 1789.

In 1836, Samuel Boyd, known as the “father of the city,” and his brother Joseph, opened the first shoe manufacturing business – an act that would change the community forever. By 1890, with a population of 14,000, Marlborough had become a major shoe manufacturing center, producing boots for Union soldiers, as well as footwear for the civilian population. Marlborough became so well known for its shoes that its official seal was decorated with a factory, a shoe box, and a pair of boots when it was incorporated as a city in 1890.

The Civil War resulted in the creation of one of the region’s most unusual historical monuments. Legend has it that a company from Marlborough, assigned to Harpers Ferry, appropriated the bell from the firehouse where John Brown last battled for the emancipation of the slaves. The company left the bell in the hands of one Mrs. Elizabeth Snyder for 30 years, returning in 1892 to bring it back to Marlborough. The bell now hangs in a tower at the corner of Route 85 and Main Street.

Around that time, Marlborough is believed to have been the first community in the country to receive a charter for a streetcar system, edging out Baltimore by a few months. The system, designed primarily for passenger use, provided access to Milford to the south, and Concord to the north. As a growing industrialized community, Marlborough began attracting skilled craftsmen from Quebec, Ireland, Italy, and Greece.

Shoe manufacturing continued in Marlborough long after the industry had fled many other New England communities. Rice & Hutchins, Inc. operated several factories in Marlborough from 1875 to 1929. Famous Frye boots were manufactured here through the 1970s, and The Rockport Company, founded in Marlborough in 1971, maintained an outlet store in the city until 2017. In 1990, when Marlborough celebrated its centennial as a city, the festivities included the construction of a park in acknowledgment of the shoe industry, featuring statues by the sculptor David Kapenteopolous.

Things Near By Marlborough

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Driving Directions
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