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Industrial Flooring Solutions for Warehouses & Manufacturing Facilities

If you manage a warehouse or manufacturing facility in the Twin Cities, you already know that your floor does far more than just occupy space beneath your feet. It supports forklifts, pallet jacks, heavy machinery, and the constant foot traffic of your workforce — day in and day out. When that floor starts to crack, chip, or deteriorate, it doesn’t just become an eyesore. It becomes a liability.

 

Uneven or damaged concrete is one of the leading causes of workplace injuries in industrial settings. It can also cause premature wear on equipment, create compliance issues with OSHA safety standards, and ultimately disrupt the operations your entire business depends on. For facilities managers, few problems are as frustrating — or as costly — as a floor that keeps failing.

Commercial Concrete Services MN

The Real Cost of Ignoring Industrial Concrete Problems

Most facilities managers don’t set out to ignore their floors. The reality is that small cracks and surface spalling often get pushed down the priority list until a minor problem becomes a major one. By then, the repair costs are significantly higher, downtime is unavoidable, and the risk to employees has already been elevated for far too long.

 

Common issues that Twin Cities industrial facilities face include:

  • Control joint deterioration from repeated heavy load cycles
  • Surface scaling and delamination caused by freeze-thaw cycles during Minnesota winters
  • Slab settlement and voids beneath the floor due to soil shifting or moisture intrusion
  • Cracking under point loads from stationary machinery and racking systems

 

These aren’t just cosmetic problems. They signal that your floor’s structural integrity may be compromised — and that it’s time to bring in a qualified concrete professional.

Why the Right Contractor Makes All the Difference

Not all concrete contractors are equipped to handle the demands of industrial and warehouse environments. Commercial concrete services for manufacturing facilities require a different level of expertise than a standard residential pour. The specifications are tighter, the loads are heavier, and the margin for error is much smaller.

 

When evaluating a commercial concrete contractor for your facility, look for:

 

Experience with industrial-grade flatwork. Your floor needs to meet specific FF/FL (flatness and levelness) tolerances, especially in high-traffic forklift aisles. A contractor who primarily does driveways and patios simply doesn’t have the equipment calibration or crew training to hit those numbers consistently.

 

Knowledge of proper joint placement and design. One of the most preventable causes of cracking is improper control joint layout. An experienced contractor designs joint spacing around your specific slab thickness, load patterns, and sub-base conditions — not a one-size-fits-all formula.

 

Understanding of mix design and curing. In Minnesota’s climate, getting the concrete mix and curing process right is critical. Rushing the cure to meet a schedule is a shortcut that shows up as surface defects and reduced long-term strength.

 

A track record with similar facilities. Ask for references from comparable warehouse or manufacturing projects in the region. A contractor confident in their work will have no hesitation pointing you to satisfied clients.

What Professional Commercial Concrete Services Include

When you partner with the right contractor, you’re not just paying for someone to pour concrete. You’re investing in a complete process: site evaluation, sub-base preparation, proper reinforcement, precision placement, finishing, and a curing protocol designed to maximize the floor’s service life.

 

At Randahl Construction, we’ve been providing commercial concrete services to Twin Cities industrial clients for years. We understand what facilities managers need — minimal disruption, durable results, and a floor that performs reliably under the demands of real industrial operations.

Get It Right the First Time

A well-executed industrial floor is one you don’t have to think about. It supports your operations, protects your employees, and holds up through decades of heavy use. The key is choosing a contractor who treats your facility with the same level of care you do.

 

Ready to talk about your facility’s concrete needs? Contact Randahl Construction today for a free site visit.

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