Warehouse Line Painting
In Naples, FL
OSHA-Compliant Safety Markings
1-800-STRIPER provides professional warehouse line painting in Naples, FL — OSHA-compliant aisle lines, walkways, and safety-zone markings per OSHA 1910.22 for industrial facilities.
1-800-STRIPER® of Naples 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:
OSHA-Compliant Markings
A safe warehouse floor is a marked one. OSHA’s walking-working-surfaces standard, 29 CFR 1910.22, requires aisles and passageways to be kept clear and appropriately marked. We paint forklift aisles, pedestrian walkways, hazard and equipment zones, storage boundaries, and loading areas so vehicle traffic and foot traffic stay separated and the floor reads at a glance. Clear markings aren’t just compliance — they prevent the forklift-pedestrian incidents that drive most warehouse injuries.
ANSI Z535.1 Color Coding
Color carries meaning on a warehouse floor. ANSI Z535.1, the safety-color standard, sets the conventions — yellow for caution and aisle ways, red for fire and danger, orange for hazardous machine parts, and other colors for specific uses. We mark to those conventions so workers read the floor instinctively and the facility stays consistent with recognized safety practice across shifts and new hires.
Floor Materials and Paint Types
Warehouse floors are usually sealed or bare concrete, and the coating affects which paint bonds best. Durable epoxy holds up to forklift traffic on high-wear floors; standard traffic paint works where wear is lighter or budgets are tighter. Sealed concrete needs the right prep so paint adheres, and we assess the floor before recommending a coating so the lines last instead of peeling under traffic.
Forklift Lanes, Walkways, and Process
The core of floor safety is separating forklift lanes from pedestrian walkways with clear width and marking so the two don’t mix. We lay out aisle widths to suit your equipment and traffic, mark crossings where they’re unavoidable, and prep, paint, and cure the floor on a schedule that keeps you running — often in sections or off-hours. We paint warehouse and industrial floors across Collier County, from Naples to Immokalee.
For a full list of our pavement marking services, visit our parking lot striping in Naples page.
Businesses We Serve
How it Works
GET A FREE ESTIMATE
Contact us today and we’ll have a quote to you in 24 hours
SCHEDULE A STRIPING
We’ll have your space restriped in less than 7 days, without affecting your business hours
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:
We proudly work with:
Frequently Asked Questions About Warehouse Line Painting in Naples, FL
What does OSHA require for warehouse floor markings?
OSHA’s 29 CFR 1910.22 requires aisles and passageways to be kept clear and marked so they’re recognizable. In practice that means defined forklift aisles, pedestrian walkways, and clear hazard and equipment zones. We mark the floor to keep traffic and foot paths separated per that standard.
What do the ANSI safety colors mean?
ANSI Z535.1 sets safety-color conventions — yellow for caution and physical hazards like aisle ways, red for fire and danger, orange for hazardous machine parts, and others for specific uses. Marking to those colors means anyone walking the floor reads it the same way.
What is the best paint for warehouse lines?
For high-traffic, high-wear floors, durable epoxy holds up best against forklift traffic; standard traffic paint works where wear is lighter. The right choice depends on the floor coating and traffic, which we assess before marking.
How wide should forklift aisles be?
Aisle width depends on the equipment and the facility’s traffic, with enough clearance for safe forklift passage plus separation from pedestrians. OSHA expects aisles kept clear and appropriately sized for the traffic they carry. We lay out widths to suit your equipment and flow.
How long before forklifts can run on new lines?
It depends on the paint and conditions. Traffic paint is typically ready in a matter of hours; epoxy needs a longer cure. We schedule the work — often in sections or off-hours — and give you a specific return-to-service window so operations aren’t disrupted.
Can you paint on sealed or bare concrete?
Both. The surface affects which paint bonds best — sealed and bare concrete take coatings differently — so we assess the floor first and choose epoxy or traffic paint accordingly for a lasting result. —