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

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

Polyurea Flooring Contractor
Harvard MA

Looking for a Polyurea Flooring Contractor in Harvard MA?

Are you a Homeowner? Business Owner? Property Manager? Or maybe someone from Harvard looking for more information on a local Polyurea Flooring Contractor?

You’re in the right place…

One Day Only Installation!

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Our Polyurea Flooring Contractors make your concrete floor look awesome and give it a beautiful new look in just one day. Our Industrial grade coating can withstand constant traffic, heavy loads, frequent impacts or dramatic temperature fluctuations without fading away! It provides the perfect solution for all those who want their floors to last longer than they did before with an affordable price tag too.

We use state of the art equipment, methods and products so you get the best epoxy or polyurea concrete floor coating solution! Our concrete coatings are easy to clean, highly slip resistant and durable enough to stay looking amazing for years. You will be given a lifetime warranty on all new concrete surfaces too! Asphalt sealers and epoxy paints aren’t designed to withstand heavy loads and constant traffic like ours do.

Our concrete coatings can come with a variety of colors, a matte or a gloss finish. It can also be applied on concrete stairs, concrete ramps, concrete balconies and concrete walkways too.

 

Problem:

Garage Floor Coatings Wellesley MA 1

Concrete floors can be ugly and boring, but they are also very durable. However, concrete is porous and absorbs everything that touches it. This means that your garage floor will look dull over time if you don’t take care of it properly.

The problem with concrete is that it gets stained easily by oil spills or grease from cars with bad undercarriages.

Solution:

Garage Floor Coatings Wellesley MA 20

Idea Concrete Coatings presents the most-advanced, fast-curing and fast-hardening system in concrete flooring technology. 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 off for many years to come if maintained properly.

Harvard, MA

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Benefits of
Concrete 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

Make Your Harvard Garage Floor More Durable With A Concrete Coating

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We offer our garage floor coatings customers the best polyurea concrete coatings in the industry. These products are designed to protect and beautify your garage floors so they can withstand anything that comes their way. And because we use only high-quality materials, the coating will last for years without fading or peeling off.

You deserve a beautiful and durable garage floor that will stand up against any type of weather or condition imaginable – which is exactly what you get with Polyurea Concrete Coatings! It doesn’t matter if it’s hot outside or cold inside, this product won’t peel away like other types of coatings do over time – it’s made to stay put!

Avoid Cracking Due To The Fluctuating Massachusetts Winters 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 garage floors are a solid choice when considering your options to protect your garage 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 Garage 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 garage 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 garage 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 Garage 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

Garage 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 garage space unique. Whatever option you choose, it won’t matter because the options are durable and strong enough to last many years ahead!

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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

Why Choose

Idea Concrete Coatings — Polyurea Flooring Contractor

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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’s Polyurea Flooring Contractor services have helped thousands of Homeowners, Business Owners, Property Managers and other individuals in Harvard, 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 Concrete Floor 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

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Map of Harvard
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Harvard Overview
Harvard, Massachusetts
Town
The renovated library, established in 1856

The renovated library, established in 1856
Official seal of Harvard, Massachusetts

Location in Worcester County and the state of Massachusetts.

Location in Worcester County and the state of Massachusetts.
Coordinates:

42°30′00″N 71°35′00″W / 42.50000°N 71.58333°W / 42.50000; -71.58333Coordinates: 42°30′00″N 71°35′00″W / 42.50000°N 71.58333°W / 42.50000; -71.58333

Country United States
State Massachusetts
County Worcester
Settled 1658
Incorporated 1732
Government

 • Type Open town meeting
 • Town Administrator Timothy P. Bragan
 • Select Board
  • Rich Maiore
  • Erin McBee
  • Kara Minar
  • Stuart Sklar
  • Alice von Loesecke
Area

 • Total 27.0 sq mi (69.9 km2)
 • Land 26.4 sq mi (68.3 km2)
 • Water 0.6 sq mi (1.6 km2)
Elevation

420 ft (128 m)
Population

 (2010)
 • Total 6,520
 • Density 240/sq mi (93/km2)
Time zone UTC-5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST) UTC-4 (Eastern)
ZIP code
01451
Area code(s) 351 / 978
FIPS code 25-28950
GNIS feature ID 0619482
Website www.harvard.ma.us

Harvard is a town in Worcester County, Massachusetts. The town is located 25 miles west-northwest of Boston, in eastern Massachusetts. A farming community settled in 1658 and incorporated in 1732, it has been home to several non-traditional communities, such as Harvard Shaker Village and the utopian transcendentalist center Fruitlands. It is also home to St. Benedict Abbey, a traditional Catholic monastery. Today it is an affluent residential town noted for its excellent public schools, with its students consistently ranking in the state’s top ten test results in English and math. The population was 6,520 at the 2010 census. The official seal of the town depicts the old town public library on The Common prior to renovations that removed the front steps.

About Harvard, MA

History

Europeans first settled in what later became Harvard in the 17th century, along a road connecting Lancaster with Groton that was formally laid out in 1658. There were few inhabitants until after King Philip’s War, in which Groton and Lancaster were attacked and substantially destroyed. Over the next 50 years the population grew until it had reached a point adequate to support a church. A new town including parts of Lancaster, Groton, and Stow was incorporated in 1732, subject to the proviso that the inhabitants “Settle a learned and Orthodox Minister among them within the space of two years and also erect an House for the publick Worship of God.” It is uncertain how the town obtained its name, though the Willard family, among the first settlers and the largest proprietors in the new town, had several connections to Harvard College. The first minister was Rev. John Seccombe, serving from 1733 to 1757.

In 1734, the town was considered to have five districts or villages. These were Oak Hill, Bare Hill, Still River, Old Mill, and Shabikin, present day Devens.

One notable early enterprise based in Harvard was the Benjamin Ball Pencil Company, which produced some of the first writing instruments made in the United States. They operated in the Old Mill district from 1830 to 1860. Despite this and other limited manufacturing, the town economy was primarily based on agriculture until the middle of the 20th century. This past is most prominently visible in the number of apple orchards. It is now mostly a residential “bedroom community” for workers at companies in Boston and its suburbs. Harvard has had a relatively quiet history, but has attracted several “non-traditional” communities that have given its history some flavor.

The Shakers

One part of town is the site of Harvard Shaker Village, where a utopian religious community was established. During a period of religious dissent, a number of Harvard residents, led by Shadrack Ireland, abandoned the Protestant church in Harvard. In 1769, they built a house that later became known as the Square House. The Shaker Founder Mother Ann Lee met with this group in 1781 and the group joined her United Society of Believers in Christ’s Second Appearing, or Shakers.

It was the first Shaker settlement in Massachusetts and the second settlement in the United States. The Harvard Shaker Village Historic District is located in the vicinity of Shaker Road, South Shaker Road, and Maple Lane. At its largest, the Shakers owned about 2,000 acres of land in Harvard. By 1890, the Harvard community had dwindled to less than 40, from a peak of about 200 in the 1850s. In 1917 the Harvard Shaker Village was closed and sold. Only one Shaker building is open to the public, at Fruitlands Museum; the remaining surviving buildings are in private ownership.

Nationally, 19 Shaker communities had been established in the 1700s and 1800s, mostly in northeastern United States. Community locations ranged from Maine to Kentucky and Indiana. The Shakers were renowned for plain architecture and furniture, and reached its national peak membership in the 1840s and 1850s. The Shaker community’s practice of celibacy meant that to maintain its population, it was always necessary to have new outsiders join. The improving employment opportunities provided by the Industrial Revolution would over the middle decades of the 1800s diminish the attractions of joining the Shaker community. Today, only one church “society” remains open, run by the last Shakers at Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village in New Gloucester, Maine.

Fruitlands

Amos Bronson Alcott relocated his family, including his ten-year-old daughter, Louisa May Alcott, to Harvard in June 1843. He and Charles Lane attempted to establish a utopian transcendentalist socialist farm called Fruitlands on the slopes of Prospect Hill in Harvard. The experimental community only lasted 7 months, closing in January 1844. Fruitlands, so called “because the inhabitants hoped to live off the fruits of the land, purchasing nothing from the outside world”, saw visits from the likes of Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Louisa May Alcott used her experience at Fruitlands as an inspiration for her novel Little Women.

Things Near By Harvard

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Driving Directions
[rkfrt-directions title=”Driving Directions From Around Harvard” city=”Harvard” address=”93 West St, Suite A5, Medfield, MA” pins=”10″]