Warehouse Line Painting
In Fairfield County, CT

OSHA-Compliant Safety Markings

1-800-STRIPER provides professional warehouse line painting in Fairfield County, CT — OSHA-compliant aisle lines, pedestrian walkways, and safety zone markings per OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22 requirements using durable epoxy and traffic paint for industrial facilities across Fairfield County.

1-800-STRIPER® of Fairfield County PROVIDes Warehouse Floor Markings Services NEAR YOU

Want your indoor space to operate more efficiently?

Warehouse and interior markings ensure clear traffic lanes, organized storage zones, and designated spaces designed to help your business operate safely and efficiently.

Benefits:

  • Maximized Safety
  • Optimized Workflow
  • ADA/OSHA Compliance
  • Professional Appearance
  • Durable, High-Visibility Paint for Stripes and Symbols
  • Warehouse floor markings by 1-800-STRIPER

    Warehouse Line Painting in Fairfield County

    Clear floor markings keep a warehouse safe, organized, and inspection-ready. 1-800-STRIPER of Fairfield County paints aisle lines, pedestrian walkways, forklift lanes, and safety zones on warehouse, factory, and industrial floors across southwestern Connecticut. Warehouse line painting — also called warehouse floor marking, factory floor marking, or industrial floor striping — turns an open slab into a controlled space where people and equipment move on defined paths.

    The driver is safety. OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22 requires that aisles and passageways be kept clear and appropriately marked, and well-defined lanes are what separate foot traffic from forklifts. Faded or missing lines invite the exact collisions the standard is written to prevent.

    OSHA-Compliant Marking Standards

    We mark to recognized safety-color conventions so your floor communicates at a glance. OSHA 29 CFR 1910.144 sets red and yellow as the core physical-hazard colors, and the ANSI Z535.1 Safety Color Code defines the full palette warehouses rely on:

    ColorStandard meaningTypical warehouse use
    YellowCaution / physical hazardsAisles, traffic lanes, work-cell borders
    RedFire / danger / emergency stopFire equipment, emergency-stop zones
    GreenSafety / first aidFirst-aid stations, safety equipment
    BlueInformation / mandatoryEquipment staging, info zones
    OrangeDangerous parts of machines/equipmentEnergized or moving-part hazards
    Black & whiteHousekeeping / trafficAisle borders, keep-clear zones

    Consistent color use means a new hire, a visitor, or an OSHA inspector reads the floor the same way your crew does.

    What We Mark and Our Process

    We mark the full range of warehouse and industrial floor needs:

    • Forklift and traffic aisles — straight, durable lane lines that hold up to constant wheel traffic.
    • Pedestrian walkways — clearly bordered foot paths that keep people out of equipment lanes.
    • Safety and hazard zones — keep-clear areas around panels, eyewash stations, and machinery.
    • Storage and staging — bin outlines, pallet positions, and inventory grids.
    • Floor symbols and text — directional arrows, stop markings, and stenciled labels.

    Our process: we assess your traffic flow and current markings, confirm the layout with your team, prep and clean the slab so coatings bond properly, then apply durable epoxy or traffic paint sized to your floor’s wear. For high-traffic concrete we recommend epoxy for its abrasion resistance; lighter-duty areas can use waterborne traffic paint. We phase the work around your operation to keep the facility running. 1-800-STRIPER of Fairfield County holds a five-star Google rating from 9+ local customers — call (203) 501-3838 for a free estimate.

    For a full list of our pavement marking services, visit our parking lot striping in Fairfield County page.

    Businesses We Serve

    amazon
    Dunkin' Donuts
    mcdonalds
    walmart

    How it Works

    Step 1: Request a free parking lot striping estimate

    GET A FREE ESTIMATE

    Contact us today and we’ll have a quote to you in 24 hours

    Step 2: Get scheduled in 7 days

    SCHEDULE A STRIPING

    We’ll have your space restriped in less than 7 days, without affecting your business hours

    Step 3: Professional striping crew arrives on-site

    GET A PARKING LOT THAT POPS

    For a budget-friendly price, you’ll get a parking lot that looks like new

    We proudly work with:

    Sherwin Williams
    Graco line striping equipment — used by 1-800-STRIPER

    We proudly work with:

    Sherwin Williams
    graco

    Frequently Asked Questions About Warehouse Line Painting in Fairfield County, CT

    What does OSHA require for warehouse floor markings?

    OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22 requires that aisles and passageways be kept clear and appropriately marked where mechanical handling equipment is used. OSHA doesn’t mandate one specific color, but 29 CFR 1910.144 and the ANSI Z535.1 color code establish yellow for aisles and physical hazards, red for fire and danger, and the rest of the safety palette most facilities follow.

    What color should warehouse aisles be?

    Yellow is the standard for aisles, traffic lanes, and general physical-hazard borders under OSHA 1910.144 and ANSI Z535.1. Red marks fire and emergency zones, green marks safety and first-aid areas, and white or black-and-white is common for housekeeping and keep-clear zones. We mark to the convention your facility and insurer expect so the floor reads consistently.

    Epoxy or traffic paint — which is better for a warehouse floor?

    It depends on traffic. Epoxy is harder and far more abrasion-resistant, so it’s the better choice for forklift aisles and high-traffic concrete that takes constant wheel wear. Waterborne traffic paint is faster to apply and reopen and works well for lighter-duty zones. We’ll recommend the right material for each area based on how hard that part of the floor gets used.

    Can you paint lines without shutting down our warehouse?

    Yes. We phase the work zone by zone and schedule around your shifts — nights, weekends, or slow periods — so most of your operation keeps running. We coordinate the sequence with your team up front so cured sections are back in service before the next area is taped off.

    How long do warehouse floor markings last?

    With the right material and prep, epoxy markings on well-maintained concrete can last several years even under forklift traffic; traffic paint in lighter-duty areas has a shorter life. Wear depends on traffic volume, cleaning chemicals, and how well the slab was prepped before coating. We prep thoroughly because adhesion is what determines how long the lines survive.

    Do you mark factory and industrial floors too, or just warehouses?

    We mark factory, manufacturing, and industrial floors as well as warehouses. The same standards and color conventions apply — aisles, pedestrian walkways, safety zones, machine-clearance borders, and staging grids. Whether it’s a distribution center, a production floor, or a mixed industrial facility, we lay out markings that fit your traffic and meet OSHA’s clear-and-marked requirement.