From precision manufacturing-floor epoxy and urethane coatings along Mearns Road and the Ivyland industrial corridor to multi-tenant retail strip center LVP fit-outs on York and Street Road, country-club kitchen recoats, and court and government building installations — Facility360° delivers commercial flooring installation built around manufacturing substrate realities, multi-tenant retail scope, and Bucks County jurisdictional complexity.
Warminster is one of the largest townships in Bucks County — over 32,000 residents across 10.2 square miles inside ZIP 18974, with more than 900 commercial businesses on the books. The commercial footprint here is unusually broad: light and precision manufacturing along Mearns Road and Indian Drive, multi-tenant retail strip centers on York Road and Street Road, the Bucks County Courts Department on Louis Drive, country clubs at Five Ponds and Spring Mill, and apartment communities across the Township.
The manufacturing core includes Lyophilization Technology on Indian Drive, Braneva Precision on Mearns Road, and the cluster of precision-tooling and machine-shop operations through the adjacent Ivyland industrial pocket. Layer on top the retail concentration at York Shopping Center and Regency Square, plus the ongoing redevelopment of the former Naval Air Development Center site, and what you get is a flooring-project environment where the next install could be an industrial urethane recoat, a retail tenant LVP fit-out, or a country-club banquet hall tile install — each running on different scheduling, substrate, and documentation realities.
Facility360° Solutions is a licensed Pennsylvania commercial contractor delivering commercial flooring installation across this corridor. Project-based scoping with a written timeline before the work begins, installation crews who handle subfloor prep and moisture mitigation as part of the scope, and finish standards calibrated to each property type — not interchangeable templates.
For property owners running portfolios that cross from Bucks into Montgomery County, the same crew quality runs across the jurisdictional boundary, and any project scope requiring permits routes through the correct county at the start rather than being discovered mid-project.
Our scope covers the full installation envelope and the prep work that determines whether a finished floor actually holds up:
Every project starts with an on-site assessment — substrate condition, moisture testing where applicable, jurisdictional confirmation for any permit-territory scope, and a written project quote with a realistic install timeline. The estimate is the price; the timeline is the timeline.
Flooring projects across this property mix run on different operational rhythms than a single-tenant-type market.
Manufacturing floors along Mearns Road, Indian Drive, and the Ivyland industrial pocket carry production tolerances where epoxy or urethane coating selection directly affects how long the floor survives chemical exposure, point loads from forklifts and machinery, and shift-based wear. Substrate prep matters as much as the coating itself — decades of accumulated mechanical damage and chemical residue don’t just disappear under a new topcoat. Schedule discipline around shift changes, planned maintenance days, or seasonal slowdowns determines whether the install fits the operational calendar.
Multi-tenant retail strip centers like York Shopping Center and the Street Road plazas split flooring project scope between landlord and tenant. Landlord-side work covers common areas, exterior thresholds, and structural subfloor remediation. Tenant-side work covers interior tenant-suite fit-outs and turnovers. Clean documentation separating the two avoids billing and chargeback problems later.
Country-club kitchens and back-of-house at Five Ponds, Spring Mill, and similar properties require chemical-resistant coating systems — typically epoxy for the kitchen floor itself, with slip-rated topcoats in food-prep zones. The work schedule fits around the club’s seasonal operational cycle, with most large-scope installs concentrating outside the prime-season months.
Court and government buildings on Louis Drive and across the Township operate under public-sector procurement and access protocols. Vendor approval, insurance documentation, and post-install reporting have to fit the facility’s internal record-keeping standard from the first project.
Because Warminster sits in Bucks County rather than Montgomery — the only one of our regional locations to do so — any scope crossing into permit territory routes through Bucks County jurisdictional processes. For owners running portfolios across both counties, this is one of the operational pieces where contractor selection actually matters.
A finished floor is only as good as the substrate prep underneath and the coating system selected for the operational environment it actually has to survive.
Nearby areas: Ivyland · Hartsville · Warrington · Hatboro · Doylestown · Jamison · Southampton · Trevose
Also serving: Horsham · Willow Grove · Bensalem · Plymouth Meeting
✓ Commercial-Grade Materials & Methods
✓ Industrial & Multi-Tenant Retail Experience
✓ Subfloor Prep + Moisture Mitigation Included
✓ Cross-County Portfolio Coverage
Commercial-Grade Flooring. Scheduled Around Your Operations. Built to Last.
When a flooring project needs to fit a manufacturing shift schedule, a retail strip tenant turnover, or a country-club seasonal window — one call schedules an on-site assessment with a written quote and realistic install timeline across Bucks County.
Standard industrial recoats require the area out of service for 48–72 hours minimum — mechanical prep, primer, base coat, optional slip-rated broadcast, topcoat, with cure times between layers. We schedule against shift changes, planned maintenance windows, or seasonal slowdowns. For larger production-floor scope, phased installs across multiple weekends are often feasible.
Yes, and clean scope separation is critical. The written scope identifies landlord-side responsibility (common areas, exterior thresholds, structural subfloor) versus tenant-side responsibility (interior tenant-suite work). Documentation separates the two so billing routes correctly and tenant chargebacks have clear underlying detail.
It doesn't change pricing or scheduling for standard scope. What changes is permit routing for any scope crossing into permit territory — structural subfloor work, occupancy changes, fire-rating modifications. Bucks County jurisdictional processes differ from the surrounding region's, and we route any required permit workflow through the correct county at scoping rather than mid-project.
Country-club flooring work typically concentrates outside the prime-season months — late fall through early spring for golf and outdoor amenities, shoulder seasons for indoor banquet spaces. Smaller scope can fit between events during the season; larger recoats and full installations are best scheduled during the off-season window when access is unrestricted.
Yes. We carry insurance, licensing, and credential documentation in a format ready for facility-manager review, work through each agency's procurement workflow, and structure post-install reporting to fit internal record-keeping. For ongoing relationships, approvals and access protocols are pre-loaded so each subsequent project starts cleanly.
Let’s keep your business facility one step ahead
One call schedules an on-site assessment with substrate evaluation, moisture testing where applicable, and a written project quote with realistic timeline. Covering manufacturing, retail, court, country-club, and apartment properties across Bucks County.
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