Warehouse Line Painting
In Boca Raton, FL

Indoor Line Striping for Warehouses and Facilities

1-800-STRIPER provides professional warehouse line painting in Boca Raton, FL — OSHA 29 CFR 1910.144-compliant aisle lines, pedestrian walkways, and ANSI Z535.1 safety zone markings using durable epoxy and traffic paint for industrial facilities across the surrounding South Florida region.

1-800-STRIPER® of Boca Raton 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 Services in Boca Raton, FL

    Warehouse and industrial facilities across South Florida depend on clear, durable floor markings for forklift safety, OSHA inspection compliance, and worker training. We paint forklift aisle lanes, pedestrian walkways, storage zone perimeters, hazard markings, dock striping, equipment-zone outlines, and color-coded safety markings for distribution centers, manufacturing facilities, fulfillment warehouses, cold-storage and food-grade facilities, and parking-garage substrates that share warehouse-style floor coatings.

    OSHA 29 CFR 1910.144 color coding requirements

    OSHA 29 CFR 1910.144 specifies the federally required color code for warehouse and industrial floor markings. Red marks danger and identifies fire-protection equipment locations. Yellow marks caution and physical hazards: areas where workers might strike against, stumble, or fall. The standard provides the foundation every warehouse markings plan starts from. Compliant marking colors and placement protect workers, support OSHA inspection readiness, and provide the visual structure forklift drivers and pedestrians rely on for safe traffic patterns.

    ANSI Z535.1 5-color safety palette for industrial floors

    ANSI Z535.1-2006 (R2011) extends the OSHA palette to a 5-color system widely adopted in modern warehouse environments. Red marks danger. Orange marks warning of moving equipment or hazardous materials. Yellow marks caution. Green identifies safety equipment, first-aid, and emergency egress. Blue conveys information and safety instruction. Crews layout warehouse markings using this 5-color system where the facility’s safety program adopts ANSI Z535.1 as the supplemental standard, integrating it with the OSHA-mandated red and yellow.

    Florida humidity and epoxy adhesion — surface prep that holds

    South Florida’s average year-round relative humidity sits at 75 to 85% per NOAA climate normals. Water-based epoxy systems cure more slowly under those conditions and can experience adhesion failure on unsealed concrete substrates. Polyurethane and solvent-based epoxy systems perform better in high-humidity environments. The prep process includes shot-blasting or grinding to a CSP 2-3 surface profile, vacuum cleanup of dust, oil and grease degreasing where contamination exists, and moisture testing per ASTM F1869 calcium chloride or ASTM F2170 in-situ relative humidity for slabs without prior coatings. Once prep is verified, we specify a system that bonds for the long term.

    Aisle width and pedestrian walkway specs (OSHA 1910.22)

    OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22 requires aisles and passageways to be sufficient for the operations performed. Industry guidance for forklift aisle width is the truck width plus 36 inches for one-way traffic and twice the truck width plus 36 inches for two-way. Pedestrian-only walkways are typically 36 to 48 inches with high-visibility yellow or green per ANSI Z535.1. Layouts get matched to your equipment specifications and traffic patterns, then we paint clear demarcation between forklift lanes, pedestrian paths, storage zones, dock areas, and hazard exclusion areas.

    Our warehouse striping process — surface prep through final cure

    The warehouse striping process starts with a site walk and slab assessment. Surface prep — shot-blasting, grinding, vacuum cleanup, degrease — establishes the bond profile. Layout uses chalk lines and laser levels to mark out forklift lanes, pedestrian walkways, storage zones, and color-coded zones per the facility’s OSHA and ANSI standard. Paint goes down in zones to keep operations running: closing one aisle or storage block at a time, painting, allowing cure, reopening before moving on. Fast-cure systems like Sherwin-Williams QUIK-LINE shorten the closure window. Night and weekend scheduling is available for facilities that can’t take daytime closure.

    At a Glance

    ColorOSHA 1910.144ANSI Z535.1Common warehouse use
    RedDanger / fire equipmentDangerFire extinguishers, alarms, fire-equipment paths
    Orange(not in OSHA core)WarningMoving equipment, hazardous materials
    YellowCaution / physical hazardsCautionForklift lanes, edge of platforms, low-clearance
    Green(not in OSHA core)Safety / first-aidSafety equipment, emergency egress, eyewash stations
    Blue(not in OSHA core)Information / safety instructionReserved-area identification, info signs

    For a full list of our pavement marking services, visit our all Boca Raton striping services 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 Boca Raton, FL

    What colors does OSHA require for warehouse safety markings?

    OSHA 29 CFR 1910.144 specifies the federally required color code for warehouse safety markings. Red marks danger and fire-protection equipment. Yellow marks caution and physical hazards (striking against, stumbling, falling). ANSI Z535.1-2006 (R2011) extends this to a 5-color palette: red (danger), orange (warning), yellow (caution), green (safety / first aid), and blue (information / safety instruction). We follow both standards on every warehouse project in the surrounding South Florida region.

    Why does Florida humidity matter for warehouse epoxy striping?

    South Florida’s average relative humidity sits at 75-85% year-round per NOAA climate normals. Water-based epoxy systems cure more slowly in high-humidity environments and can experience adhesion failure on unsealed concrete substrates. Polyurethane and solvent-based epoxy systems perform better under these conditions. We assess your slab — moisture content, prior coatings, oil contamination — and specify a system that bonds for the long term in Boca Raton’s humid climate.

    What is the minimum aisle width OSHA requires?

    OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22 requires aisles and passageways to be sufficient for the operations performed. Industry guidance for forklift aisle width is the truck width plus 36 inches minimum for one-way and twice the truck width plus 36 inches for two-way. Pedestrian-only walkways are typically 36-48 inches. We layout warehouse markings to your equipment specs and traffic patterns, then paint clear demarcation between forklift lanes, pedestrian paths, and storage zones.

    How do you prepare warehouse concrete before painting?

    Surface preparation determines bond life. Our process includes: shot-blasting or grinding to a CSP 2-3 profile, vacuum cleanup of dust and debris, oil and grease degreasing where contamination exists, and moisture testing per ASTM F1869 calcium chloride or ASTM F2170 in-situ relative humidity for slabs without prior coatings. Once the slab passes prep, we apply the epoxy or polyurethane system per the manufacturer’s data sheet for cure time and recoat windows.

    Can you restripe a warehouse without shutting down operations?

    For most active distribution centers we work in zones — closing one aisle or storage block at a time, painting, allowing cure, and reopening before moving to the next zone. Fast-cure systems like Sherwin-Williams QUIK-LINE shorten the closure window to a few hours per aisle. Night and weekend scheduling is also available. We coordinate with your operations manager to minimize forklift traffic disruption and meet your throughput requirements. —