Epoxy Floor Coating Hurst, TX
Professional garage and commercial epoxy floors in Hurst (76053, 76054) — mid-cities Tarrant County, same-week appointments.
Call (817) 646-8612Fort Worth Garage Epoxy Floors serves Hurst and the Mid-Cities corridor throughout the week. Hurst's housing stock — largely established neighborhoods from the 1960s through the 1980s, with scattered newer infill — sits on the same Blackland Prairie clay as all of Tarrant County. Older Hurst slabs near Pipeline Road and Precinct Line Road show decades of cumulative clay-movement cracking and are frequently candidates for more extensive crack fill than newer construction neighborhoods. That's exactly what our prep process handles.
Call (817) 646-8612 for a free on-site estimate. We serve all Hurst zip codes and typically have same-week availability.
Why Hurst Homes Need Professional Epoxy
Hurst's established neighborhoods were built during an era when concrete finishing practices were less standardized than today. Slabs from the 1960s–1980s in zip codes 76053 and 76054 frequently show surface scaling (a form of surface delamination from curing conditions), cumulative seasonal cracking, and in many cases a previous layer of latex paint or thin-roll epoxy that has partially peeled. These slabs need the most thorough prep work — more aggressive grinding, more crack fill, and sometimes a skim resurfacer over heavily scaled areas — to provide a clean substrate for a lasting coating system.
What We Typically See in Hurst Slabs
- Cumulative clay-movement cracking. Slabs from the 1960s–80s have experienced 40–60 annual expansion-contraction cycles. Surface crack networks are common and require thorough polyurea fill before coating.
- Previous paint or thin epoxy failures. Hurst garages from this era frequently had latex paint or thin roll-on epoxy applied at some point — usually already failing or peeled. We grind all of it off.
- Surface scaling. Early-cycle seasonal clay movement combined with the finishing practices of the era produces scaled surface layers in some Hurst slabs. We grind through the scaled layer to sound concrete.
- Oil contamination from long-term garage use. Slabs used as working garages for decades accumulate deep oil penetration. We treat these with degreaser, re-grind, and verify no contamination remains before priming.
Services Available in Hurst
Frequently Asked Questions — Hurst
Do you service Hurst 76053 and 76054?
Yes — all of Hurst including the neighborhoods along Pipeline Road, Precinct Line Road, and Brown Trail. Call (817) 646-8612 with your address to confirm availability.
My Hurst garage slab is from the 1970s — is it coatable?
Yes, if it's structurally sound. Older slabs need more prep time but the coating result is just as good. We assess structural condition during the free inspection and tell you honestly if there are issues that need to be addressed first.
I have a lot of cracks in my Hurst garage floor — does that mean I need foundation work before epoxy?
Not necessarily. Surface hairline cracks from seasonal clay movement are normal and repairable. Structural cracks (vertical displacement, actively growing patterns) are different — we document those and recommend a foundation specialist. We'll tell you which type you have during the inspection.
How long does an older Hurst slab job take?
Same two-day timeline as a newer slab — we may need more time on Day 1 for extra crack fill and prep, but the overall project schedule doesn't typically extend beyond two days.
Can you match a specific flake color I saw at a neighbor's house?
Bring us a photo and we can usually match or closely approximate the blend. We carry a wide range of standard flake blends and can mix custom ratios for color matching.
What We Typically See in Hurst Zip Codes 76053 and 76054
Hurst's established neighborhoods produce some of the most prep-intensive garage floor jobs we encounter in Tarrant County. In zip code 76053 — the western half of Hurst along Pipeline Road and Brown Trail — the construction era is predominantly 1960s through late 1970s. These slabs have experienced 45–60 complete seasonal expansion-contraction cycles under the Blackland Prairie clay. The result is a well-developed crack network: hairline cracks at regular intervals running parallel to the garage's long axis, transverse cracks at door threshold transitions, and in many cases, corner cracks near the overhead door opening where the slab encounters the garage foundation stem wall.
In zip code 76054 — the northern and eastern Hurst neighborhoods near Precinct Line Road and the Keller border — construction is somewhat later (late 1970s through early 1990s), and slabs are generally in better condition. Crack fill is still required but less extensive. These slabs are more likely to have previous single-coat epoxy paint or latex floor paint attempts — we see this in about 40% of the 76054 jobs we quote. All of that previous coating comes off during the grinding phase.
Oil contamination is common in both Hurst zip codes — the garages in these neighborhoods have been used as working garages for decades. We treat oil zones with a degreaser, re-grind, and confirm removal before applying primer. We've never refused to coat a Hurst slab because of oil contamination — we've just had to be more thorough on a few of them.
Nearby Service Areas
Free Epoxy Floor Estimate in Hurst
Same-week inspections. Written quote in 24 hours. No pressure.
Call (817) 646-8612