Warehouse Line Painting
In Ogden, UT
Indoor Line Striping for Warehouses and Facilities
1-800-STRIPER provides professional warehouse line painting in Ogden, UT — OSHA-compliant aisle lines, pedestrian walkways, and safety zone markings per OSHA 1910.22 requirements using durable epoxy and traffic paint for Wasatch Front distribution centers.
1-800-STRIPER® of Ogden 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:
Warehouse Line Painting in Ogden, UT
Warehouse line painting marks the forklift aisles, pedestrian walkways, loading zones, staging areas, and safety boundaries a distribution facility needs to run safely at volume. Ogden’s I-15 and I-84 corridors anchor one of Utah’s densest warehousing footprints. Amazon fulfillment, Walmart distribution, Lifetime Products, and hundreds of smaller shippers all run on clear floor markings to pass OSHA inspections and keep shift operations moving.
1-800-STRIPER of Ogden paints warehouse floors to OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22 requirements. We use durable epoxy and traffic paint that resists forklift tire abrasion, pallet-jack scuffing, and cleaning chemicals. Our crews work around live operations on weekends, overnight shifts, and planned downtime, so pick-pack workflows never stop.
OSHA 1910.22 Compliance
OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22(b) requires employers to keep permanent aisles and passageways appropriately marked. Facility managers who skip this, or who let markings fade past visibility, face citations ranging from informal notices to willful-violation fines. For Ogden warehouses that support national retailers, audit visibility is near-certain. Corporate and third-party auditors walk floors and cite unmarked traffic lanes.
A compliant warehouse line painting job in Ogden marks every required area:
- Forklift aisles (yellow, minimum 2-inch line width, both edges)
- Pedestrian walkways (yellow or contrasting color, continuous)
- Loading zones and staging areas (dedicated color or outline)
- Emergency egress routes and fire-exit paths (green)
- Fire equipment locations (red)
- Battery-charging, chemical-storage, and hazardous areas (red or hazard striping)
- Equipment and work cells (white outline)
ANSI Z535.2 Color Code Standards
OSHA doesn’t specify floor-marking colors directly. The ANSI Z535.2 safety standard fills that gap and is the de-facto color vocabulary on U.S. warehouse floors. Ogden industrial auditors reference ANSI Z535.2 directly, so our jobs follow it. Your floors end up communicating the same thing from one facility to the next.
| Color | Meaning | Typical use |
|---|---|---|
| Yellow | Caution, traffic lanes | Forklift aisles, pedestrian walkways, pillar impact zones |
| White | Equipment, work cells | Racks, machines, staging tables, work cells |
| Red | Fire, emergency, danger | Fire extinguishers, emergency stops, hazardous-material storage |
| Green | Safety, first-aid | First-aid stations, eyewash, AED, emergency exits |
| Blue | Informational | Material carts, RTV stations, parts staging |
| Orange | Energized equipment | Exposed electrical, high-voltage panels |
| Black / yellow stripes | Impact hazard | Forklift loading bays, dock edges, low clearance |
Our Warehouse Striping Process
- Site walk. We review OSHA requirements, ANSI Z535.2 color mapping, and your facility’s existing layout with your safety manager.
- Floor prep. Debris removal, pressure washing where needed, degreaser on oil stains. Line paint will not bond to contaminated concrete.
- Layout and mask. Chalk lines or snap lines lay out aisles; masking tape defines edges for sharp borders.
- Paint application. Epoxy for high-wear primary aisles, fast-dry traffic paint for lower-traffic zones, stenciled text and symbols for pedestrian crossings and equipment IDs.
- Cure and release. Epoxy is typically walkable in 2 to 4 hours, full-cure for forklift traffic in 12 to 24 hours. Water-based traffic paint is faster.
- Handoff. We document painted areas and color mapping for your OSHA file.
For a full list of our pavement marking services, visit our full Ogden service lineup 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 Ogden, UT
Are warehouse floor markings required by OSHA in Ogden, UT?
Yes. Under OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22, employers must keep permanent aisles and passageways in warehouses appropriately marked. For Ogden’s distribution hub properties — including Amazon fulfillment centers, Walmart distribution facilities, and Lifetime Products — clearly painted aisle lines, pedestrian walkways, and safety zones are required to stay OSHA-compliant. Warehouse line painting in Ogden typically uses durable epoxy or traffic paint to withstand forklift and pallet-jack traffic in Utah industrial facilities.
What areas of a warehouse should be marked?
A complete warehouse line painting job marks forklift aisles, pedestrian walkways, loading zones, staging areas, hazardous material storage boundaries, fire-exit paths, equipment zones, battery-charging stations, and emergency shutoff locations. ANSI Z535.2 standards guide color selection so each area communicates its function at a glance. For Ogden facilities along the I-15 and I-84 freight corridor, well-marked floors support both OSHA inspections and everyday shift safety.
What colors are standard for warehouse floor markings?
ANSI Z535.2 assigns meanings to warehouse floor marking colors: yellow for aisles and traffic lanes, white for work cells and equipment zones, red for fire equipment and emergency stops, green for safety supplies (first aid, eyewash), blue for material stations (RTV, parts), and black-and-yellow hazard striping for impact zones. 1-800-STRIPER of Ogden applies these standards so Utah industrial auditors, forklift operators, and pedestrians share the same visual language.
Should I use floor paint or tape for warehouse line painting?
Paint produces longer-lasting, cleaner warehouse line markings than tape in Ogden distribution environments. Epoxy and traffic paints bond to clean concrete and resist forklift tire abrasion, pallet-jack scuffing, and cleaning-solution exposure. Tape is a reasonable short-term option for temporary layout changes, but it tends to lift at edges once forklifts run over it repeatedly. For permanent warehouse line painting in Ogden, we recommend paint.
How long do warehouse floor markings last in Northern Utah?
Properly installed epoxy or traffic-paint warehouse line markings in Ogden facilities last 2 to 5 years under normal conditions. Heavy forklift traffic, aggressive cleaning chemicals, and high humidity shorten that window; lighter use and routine touch-ups extend it. Central Utah’s dry climate is friendlier to warehouse floor markings than outdoor parking lots — the biggest wear factor indoors is wheel traffic, not weather.
Can warehouse line painting be done while the facility is operating?
Yes. 1-800-STRIPER of Ogden schedules warehouse line painting during weekends, overnight shifts, or planned operational pauses so pallet movement, forklift operations, and pick-pack workflows continue without disruption. We mark off sections, apply fast-drying epoxy or traffic paint, and release each area back to production as soon as it’s cured. For large Ogden distribution centers, we can phase a multi-day job across several off-shifts. —