Why Commercial Kitchens & Hospitality Specify Epoxy Flooring Ghana
Hotel kitchens, large-scale catering facilities, and institutional food-service operations impose floor conditions that standard screed or quarry tile cannot reliably sustain. Thermal shock from steam cleaning, continuous exposure to food acids and cleaning chemicals, standing water across shift cycles, and the unrelenting mechanical load of rolling equipment combine to degrade ordinary surfaces within months. Since 1981 — 45 years of specification-grade practice — Epoxy Flooring Ghana has engineered floor systems purpose-built for the demands that hospitality and food-service clients place on their facilities every single day.
The consequence of floor failure in a commercial kitchen is not cosmetic. It triggers compliance risk, operational shutdown, and potential injury liability. Hospitality procurement teams and executive chefs alike specify our systems because the floor is a critical infrastructure asset, not a finish material. Our 2002 Gold recognition at the Top 3 Ghana Awards (Specialist Epoxy Flooring, Cert ID: T3G-2002-793668) reflects the standard of practice our clients have relied upon across decades of institutional commissions.
Specification Requirements Unique to Commercial Kitchens & Hospitality
Commercial kitchen floors in Ghana are subject to the Ghana Food and Drugs Authority facility hygiene guidelines and, for internationally affiliated hotel brands, the additional corporate brand standards their franchise agreements mandate. These specifications require seamless, impermeable surfaces with no grout lines where bacteria can colonise, drainage falls integrated to correct gradient so standing water evacuates between cleaning cycles, and anti-slip ratings appropriate to wet and greasy conditions. The governing R-rating benchmark for kitchen floors is R12 — the upper wet-barefoot and shod-traffic anti-slip classification — and our systems are specified and applied to meet that threshold as a minimum.
Beyond slip resistance, the floor system must withstand thermal cycling. Kitchen floors endure boiling water spillage, direct steam, and cold-store adjacency, all within metres of one another. Our resin selection and primer systems account for substrate moisture and thermal movement so that delamination, which would represent a hygiene and structural failure simultaneously, is engineered out of the specification from the outset.
Recommended Services for Commercial Kitchens & Hospitality
- R12 Anti-Slip Epoxy Flooring — broadcast aggregate finish delivering rated slip resistance for wet, greasy, and high-traffic kitchen environments
- Epoxy Screed Systems — heavy-duty trowel-applied systems at 4–9 mm build depth for facilities with significant impact and rolling-load exposure
- Integrated Drainage Falls — precision-graded substrate preparation to ensure correct fall-to-drain gradients across the full floor plane
- Cove Skirting Installation — seamless floor-to-wall junctions eliminating harbourage points for bacteria and moisture ingress at perimeters
- Hygienic Wall Coating (Food-Safe Zones) — extending the seamless, chemical-resistant surface envelope from floor plane to lower-wall zones in food preparation areas
Notable Project Types
Our commercial kitchen and hospitality commissions span a consistent range of institutional scale: five-star hotel main kitchen and pastry production areas across the Accra CBD and Airport City corridors; large banqueting and production kitchen facilities servicing conference centres and premium hotel ballrooms along the Tema coastline; and institutional catering kitchens for multinational regional headquarters where on-site staff catering must meet international food-safety audit standards. In each case, the floor scope extends beyond the primary cooking zone to include pot-wash, cold preparation, dry store, and service corridor areas — the full operational envelope rather than a single room.
Catering commissary and central production kitchens, which supply multiple retail or hotel outlets from a single facility, represent a growing commission category. These operations run extended hours with minimal downtime, which constrains installation scheduling and demands adhesion and cure performance that will not be compromised by phased working windows.
Compliance & Standards
- Ghana Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) facility hygiene and surface impermeability requirements
- R12 anti-slip classification (wet-shod and wet-barefoot environments)
- HACCP facility design principles — seamless, cleanable surfaces with no harbourage geometry
- International hotel brand facility standards (franchise audit compliance)
- Ghana Standards Authority GSA EN 1504 — surface preparation and coating adhesion benchmarks
- BS 8204 Part 3 — resin floor screed specification and in-situ thickness verification