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Secteur

Food Production Facilities

Food manufacturers, beverage bottlers, and HACCP-certified operations commission hygienic epoxy with integrated coved bases for production halls and packaging zones.

Why Food Production Facilities Specify Epoxy Flooring Ghana

Food manufacturers, beverage bottlers, and HACCP-certified processing operations share a common operational reality: the floor is a critical control point. Drainage slopes must be precise, surface porosity must be eliminated, and chemical resistance must hold against caustic wash-down agents applied daily. Since 1981 — 45 years of practice across Ghana’s most demanding industrial environments — Epoxy Flooring Ghana has engineered floors that satisfy the hygiene protocols food-grade facilities require without conceding the structural performance that heavy production equipment and forklift traffic demand.

The Top 3 Ghana Awards recognised this specialisation with a 2002 Gold Award in Specialist Epoxy Flooring (Cert ID: T3G-2002-793668), a designation earned through consistent delivery of specification-grade systems to Tier-1 institutional clients across the Tema Industrial Corridor and beyond. Food facility managers, procurement directors, and food-safety auditors commission Epoxy Flooring Ghana precisely because compliant floors cannot be retrofitted after an audit failure — they must be specified and installed correctly from the outset.

Specification Requirements Unique to Food Production Facilities

Food production environments impose constraints that no general-purpose floor coating can satisfy. HACCP methodology designates floor-to-wall junctions as high-risk contamination zones; integrated coved skirting — sealed, radius-profiled, and monolithic with the field coating — is therefore a mandatory element, not an optional finish. Surface systems must achieve a surface profile that is simultaneously non-porous (to deny microbial harbouring) and slip-resistant under wet production conditions, meeting the anti-slip thresholds required for wet-process zones under Ghana’s occupational health regulations and internationally recognised GMP standards.

Chemical resistance specifications in food facilities extend beyond standard industrial acids. Cleaning-in-place (CIP) cycles deploy sodium hypochlorite, peracetic acid, and caustic soda at elevated temperatures; the selected resin matrix must retain adhesion and surface integrity through repeated thermal cycling. Drain-field gradient engineering — typically a 1.5–2% fall to drainage channels — requires a specialist installer capable of feathering resin thickness precisely to maintain the specification across large production-floor expanses. These are not cosmetic considerations; they are engineering parameters Epoxy Flooring Ghana builds into every food-facility programme.

Notable Project Types

Epoxy Flooring Ghana has delivered floor programmes across the full spectrum of food and beverage production typologies in Ghana. Beverage bottling halls — characterised by large open-plan floor areas, high forklift traffic, and aggressive daily wash-down — represent a core project type, typically spanning 800–3,000 square metres of seamless epoxy with integrated drain channels. Packaged-food manufacturing facilities require zone-differentiated specifications: antimicrobial topping coats for raw-material processing zones, heavy-duty broadcast systems for warehousing, and demarcation striping aligned to traffic-management and food-safety zone plans.

Cooking-oil refineries and fish-processing plants introduce additional complexity — elevated floor temperatures, fish oils and organic acids, and condensation cycling that demands a resin system with exceptional adhesion to green or contaminated substrates. These projects are delivered under a structured commissioning programme that includes surface preparation audit, moisture-vapour testing, and a written specification document the facility’s food-safety team retains for regulatory inspection.

Compliance & Standards