Textile & Fabrication Warehouse Flooring
Warehouse Flooring Solutions designs and installs industrial concrete slab floors, polished concrete warehouse flooring and warehouse floor resurfacing systems for textile and fabrication warehouses across the UK. Floors are configured around looms, cutting tables, sewing lines, fabric racks and despatch zones so materials and finished goods can move efficiently.
20 +
Years
Experience in Textile Facility Flooring
Textile and fabrication warehouses combine production areas with bulk storage, roll handling and order picking. We install and upgrade floors that support heavy textile machinery, long material runs and busy picking aisles, while helping control dust and lint so the building is easier to keep tidy and presentable for customers and auditors.
Our Expertise
Flooring Needs in Textile & Fabrication Warehouses
Textile and fabrication sites often include weaving bays, knitting halls, cutting rooms, sewing lines, embroidery areas, fabric roll stores and packing or e-commerce zones. The same floor must cope with fixed machinery, trolleys stacked with rolls, pallet loads of boxed product and sometimes mezzanine support posts. Surfaces need to run true beneath long tables and production lines, while giving smooth movement for castors, pallet trucks and forklifts.
Many operators use
engineered warehouse slabs
to carry racking and textile equipment, enhanced locally with
resurfacing systems
where joints, worn patches or level changes cause problems. In packing and despatch areas,
polished concrete floors
are popular, giving brighter environments similar to
packaging facilities
and
logistics hubs
where clear markings and accurate stock control are essential.
Flooring Problems in Textile & Fabrication Warehouses
When floors begin to fail in textile warehouses, the effects are often felt in material flow, cleaning time and staff comfort. Localised defects can disrupt roll handling, snag trolleys or lead to repeated patch repairs that never quite solve the problem.
Uneven slabs causing movement under long tables or cutting lines
Damaged joints that make roll trolleys or pallet trucks jolt as they cross between bays
Surface wear that breaks down into dust, adding to lint and fibres in the air
Low spots where water from occasional cleaning or minor leaks collects
Rough areas that catch on textile carts or cause vibration in sewing and embroidery equipment
Older coatings or fillers peeling away, creating loose material around fabric storage and packing benches
Our Process
STEP 1
We walk the warehouse with your production, logistics and health and safety teams, reviewing where looms, cutters, sewing lines and racking are located. We identify problem areas such as difficult joints, worn sections in picking lanes, and locations where cleaning takes longer than it should. We also take note of any plans for new machinery or layout changes so the floor design supports future development.
STEP 2
We propose a scheme that may include new concrete slab construction in heavy racking or machine areas, focused concrete resurfacing solutions in production lanes and around sensitive equipment, and polished concrete routes in packing and despatch zones. Levels, joint treatments and transitions between older and new areas are planned together so roll trolleys, pallet trucks and staff can move with minimal disruption.
STEP 3
Works are divided into manageable phases to keep production and order fulfilment running. We isolate selected aisles or bays, carry out preparation using appropriate methods and install the chosen floor system. Each section is handed back ready for sweeping, vacuuming and re-instating machinery or racking, allowing you to bring lines and storage back into operation without unnecessary downtime.
Floors are installed and checked in line with BS 8204, supporting straight, stable surfaces beneath long production lines, trolleys and handling equipment throughout the warehouse.
Concrete works follow BS EN 206 guidance for mix selection and curing, providing a sound base under racking legs, machinery feet and textile handling routes, and supporting any subsequent resurfacing or polishing.
Our teams hold CSCS cards and are used to working around operational production areas, defined walkways and site safety rules in textile and wider industrial environments.
SMAS Worksafe accreditation confirms compliance with SSIP schemes, supporting structured safety management on flooring projects across textile warehouses and manufacturing facilities.
We deliver flooring solutions for textile and fabrication warehouses across the UK, helping you improve material flow, housekeeping and day to day reliability from production bay to despatch.
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