A floor coated right · Vancouver · metallic, flake & solid epoxy
An epoxy floor is the hardest-working surface in a building and the one you abuse most. When it's done right, you never think about it — it stays bonded, the colour holds, and it takes years of tires, oil and dropped tools without complaint. When it's done in a hurry, you feel every shortcut: the bubble by the door, the patch that peels in a wet winter, the chalky worn track running to the back of the shop.
FraserPlus Epoxy does one trade, properly. Grind, prime, coat, seal — metallic, flake and solid epoxy systems, prepped and poured by people who treat the slab prep and the moisture test as carefully as the final clear coat. The glossy floor you see at the end is the easy part. The reason it stays that way is everything that happened before the first coat went down.
A coating isn't laid on the day it's poured. It's laid on the day the concrete is ground clean and dry.
The work that doesn't show
Most of what makes an epoxy floor last sits where you'll never see it: concrete diamond-ground to an open profile, oil and contamination drawn out, cracks and joints detailed, and the slab moisture tested before a drop of resin goes down. Get those right and the coating stays bonded for years. Get them wrong and no topcoat in the world will keep it from peeling.
Recoating is the same idea in reverse. A failing floor isn't always replaced — it's stripped back to sound concrete, re-profiled, and a fresh system laid. Done well, a peeling old garage floor reads brand new and seamless. The colour carries right to the walls, because the edges and joints were cut in to the coat instead of left as an afterthought.
Why stay small
It would be easy to grow into a crew where the person who quotes the floor never sees it again. FraserPlus stays small on purpose. The same hands grind the concrete, broadcast the flake and lay on the clear — so there's one team standing behind how the floor looks the day it's poured and how it holds up after years of traffic. Across Vancouver, that continuity is the product.

