Serving Crowley, TX and surrounding areas. (682) 247-0194
Crowley Concrete Polishing & Epoxy Flooring serves Fort Worth homeowners and businesses with commercial epoxy floor coatings, garage floor systems, polished concrete, and concrete resurfacing. Fort Worth spans everything from century-old Craftsman bungalows near Mistletoe Heights to new slab-on-grade subdivisions off I-35W - our crew has worked in both, and we respond to every inquiry within one business day.

Fort Worth has a substantial commercial and industrial base - aviation facilities, logistics warehouses near Alliance, auto service shops, and light manufacturing throughout the west side. Bare concrete in these settings degrades quickly under vehicle traffic, forklift loads, and chemical exposure. Our commercial and industrial epoxy floor coatings are designed for those demands, with the film thickness, chemical resistance, and slip ratings that commercial spaces require.
Fort Worth's mid-century ranch homes in neighborhoods like Wedgwood and Ridglea Hills were built with attached garages that have never been coated. Decades of oil absorption, black gumbo soil movement underneath the slab, and Fort Worth summer heat have left many of these garage floors stained, dusty, and difficult to clean. A coated slab handles all of that - and it is far easier to maintain long-term than bare concrete.
Newer Fort Worth subdivisions near Alliance, Fossil Creek, and the communities off I-35W often have large open-plan interiors where polished concrete is a practical, low-maintenance flooring option. The slab is already in place - grinding and polishing it properly eliminates the need for tile or hardwood that can shift or separate over a clay soil foundation. It also holds up better to the foot traffic and pet activity common in family homes.
Fort Worth driveways and patios on black gumbo soil crack and scale faster than in areas with more stable ground. Many slabs are structurally sound enough that a bonded overlay restores the surface without requiring a full replacement - a practical choice in a city where the median home value and practical homeowner mindset both push toward cost-effective solutions that last.
Fort Worth homeowners renovating historic bungalows in Fairmount or Mistletoe Heights often look for interior flooring that matches the character of the home without adding materials that can be damaged by moisture or slab movement. Stained concrete - applied to an existing slab or a new overlay - delivers a warm, natural appearance that holds up in both older construction and newer builds.
Fort Worth's wet springs and severe hail seasons drive moisture into unsealed exterior concrete, and then summer heat and drought pull it back out - a cycle that degrades surface integrity faster than in more stable climates. Sealing driveways, patios, and pool deck surrounds after installation or repair gives exterior slabs a meaningful extra layer of protection against both moisture and UV damage.
Fort Worth sits at the eastern edge of the West Texas plains, and the clay-heavy soil beneath the city - locally known as black gumbo - is the dominant factor in how concrete slabs behave here. Black gumbo absorbs moisture and swells when spring rains arrive, then dries and contracts sharply during the hot summers. Fort Worth averages some of its highest rainfall in April and May, followed almost immediately by dry heat that pushes daytime temperatures to 95°F or higher. That wet-dry cycle repeated over decades is why foundation and slab movement is one of the most common complaints from homeowners in neighborhoods like Wedgwood, Ridglea Hills, and the older parts of the near south side. A concrete flooring contractor who installs a coating or overlay without assessing how the slab has already moved is installing something designed to fail.
Fort Worth is also one of the fastest-growing large cities in the country, and that growth has created a city with highly variable housing stock. Historic districts like Fairmount and Mistletoe Heights, listed with the City of Fort Worth Historic Preservation office, have homes built as early as 1900 with pier-and-beam construction and plaster walls - these require a fundamentally different approach than a 2010 slab-on-grade subdivision house off I-35W. The city also sees regular severe hail events and the occasional hard freeze - Winter Storm Uri in 2021 caused widespread concrete damage across Fort Worth as water penetrated unsealed surfaces and expanded during the freeze. Homeowners who seal and coat their concrete proactively come out of those events in far better shape than those who wait.
Our crew works throughout Fort Worth regularly, and the range of concrete work here is wider than in most cities our size. On any given week we might be prepping a garage floor in a 1970s Wedgwood ranch home, installing a commercial epoxy system in a light-industrial space near the Alliance corridor, or resurfacing a driveway in a newer subdivision off Saginaw Boulevard. Each of those jobs has different slab conditions, different prep requirements, and different expectations from the customer - and knowing that before we show up makes every visit more productive.
Fort Worth is a city with a strong local identity. The Stockyards National Historic District in north Fort Worth - where cattle drives and rodeos are still part of daily life - is one of the most recognized landmarks in the city. The Cultural District, home to the Kimbell Art Museum and the Amon Carter Museum, sits just west of downtown in a neighborhood that borders some of the city's older residential areas. Sundance Square anchors the downtown core and is a reference point most Fort Worth residents know immediately. These are not just landmarks for visitors - they orient the city for the residents we work for every day.
We serve the cities adjacent to Fort Worth as well. If you are in Benbrook to the southwest or in Grand Prairie to the east, we cover those communities on the same schedule as Fort Worth.
Call us or fill out the contact form. We respond to every Fort Worth inquiry within one business day. Tell us what you are dealing with - garage floor, commercial space, driveway, interior slab - so we can send the right crew for the assessment.
We come to your Fort Worth property, measure the space, check the slab condition, and walk through the right options for your specific situation. The estimate visit is free and you get a written price before any work starts - no verbal quotes that change later.
We mechanically prepare the slab to the profile required for the coating or overlay system, then apply it in the correct sequence. Most residential Fort Worth jobs take one to two days. Older slabs that need heavier prep may run slightly longer - we give you a realistic timeline upfront.
Before we leave, we walk the finished floor with you and explain cure timelines - typically 24 hours for foot traffic and 72 hours before driving on a garage floor. We answer any questions about cleaning products and long-term care before we pack up.
We serve all of Fort Worth, TX - from older neighborhoods near the Stockyards to newer subdivisions south of I-20. We respond within one business day and every estimate is free and written.
(682) 247-0194Fort Worth is one of the fastest-growing large cities in the United States, with a population that has grown from roughly 741,000 in 2010 to well over 900,000 today, making it the 13th largest city in the country according to U.S. Census data. The city is sometimes called "Where the West Begins" because it sits at the transition from the humid, forested east Texas landscape to the drier, flatter western plains. Fort Worth has dozens of distinct neighborhoods - from the historic Craftsman bungalows in Fairmount and Mistletoe Heights (built between 1900 and 1940) to the mid-century ranch homes of Wedgwood and Ridglea Hills to the newer suburban communities near Alliance and Keller on the north side and the developments south of I-20. That range of housing stock means concrete flooring needs vary widely from one neighborhood to the next.
Major employers include American Airlines (headquartered nearby at DFW Airport), Lockheed Martin, and Texas Health Resources - a workforce of practical, working-family homeowners who invest in their properties long-term. The Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District in the north, Sundance Square in the downtown core, and the Cultural District to the west are landmarks that most Fort Worth residents can orient themselves around without a map. If your property sits near Benbrook on the southwest edge of Fort Worth or near Crowley to the south, we cover those communities and the surrounding area on the same schedule.
Heavy-duty epoxy solutions built for commercial and industrial facilities.
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Learn MoreProfessional grinding and surface prep for lasting coating adhesion.
Learn MoreRestore worn concrete with decorative overlays and resurfacing.
Learn MoreSelf-leveling overlays that create perfectly flat, smooth surfaces.
Learn MoreSlip-resistant pool deck coatings that stand up to sun and water.
Learn MoreEfficient stripping and removal of old coatings and adhesives.
Learn MoreWe serve all of Fort Worth, TX and respond within one business day. Call or submit the form - the estimate is free and there is no obligation.