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Industrial Concrete — Montgomery County & Southeast Texas
High-strength warehouse floors, machine foundations, loading docks, and containment areas for industrial facilities, GCs, and developers across Southeast Texas.
Industrial floors carry forklifts, racking, and machinery every day for decades. We build them to the spec sheet — mix, thickness, joints, and flatness — and document it.
What's Included
From a single equipment pad to a full warehouse floor package.
Industrial floors fail at the joints and disappoint at the wheels. We engineer the pour around your actual use: joint layout matched to racking and traffic patterns, dowel load-transfer where the design calls for it, and finishing planned to hit FF/FL specs when your equipment demands them.
Mix designs, reinforcement, vapor barriers, and curing all follow the project specification — and for occupied facilities we phase pours around your operations so production keeps running while the floor goes in.
How It Works
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Straight Answers
Yes — when your racking, lift equipment, or spec sheet calls for defined FF/FL numbers, we plan the pour around hitting them: placement method, finishing sequence, and third-party testing coordination. Tell us the spec up front and it gets built into the bid and the pour plan.
Driven by your loads: forklift class, rack post loads, and any heavy equipment. Common warehouse sections run 6–8 inches with the reinforcement and joint design matched to the use — but the right answer comes from the load data, not a rule of thumb. Send us your racking layout and equipment specs and we'll work from those.
Joint layout is where industrial floors are won or lost — forklift wheels find every bad joint. We plan joint spacing around your rack and traffic layout, use dowel load-transfer systems where the design calls for them, and saw joints on schedule so cracking happens where it's planned.
Yes — phased pours, dust and access control, and scheduling around your shifts. We've worked occupied facilities and we plan the sequence with your operations team so production doesn't stop for concrete.
When the design calls for it — typically under floors getting coatings, polished finishes, or moisture-sensitive operations — yes, installed to spec beneath the slab. If your floor will be coated, raise it early; it changes the slab buildup.
Yes — warehouse floors, equipment foundations, containment areas, and dock packages. We're Blue Book listed, fully insured, and we staff our committed pour dates. Send plans to info@jpconcretesolutions.com.
GCs and facility owners: email plans to info@jpconcretesolutions.com or use the form. Include racking and equipment loads if you have them.
Residential • Commercial • Industrial • Montgomery County & Beyond