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Floorguard® New treatments Make the Area so Clean, you just May want to move in
Jun 28, 2007
LANDENBERG, Pa. — It glistens.
That’s the first thing you’ll
notice. The garage floor reflects
light as if it had been hosed down
moments ago. It reveals
a texture that
doesn’t seem likely to
allow a person to slip,
should the floor actually
become wet. Look
at the floor of Dave
and Nita Trexler’s
two-car garage, and
you might react as one
of their neighbors did.
“I just walked into
his garage,” Colin
Hunt says, “and said
‘Whoa.’ ”
The Trexlers last fall opened a
franchise of the Chicago-based
Floorguard, a company that for
nearly 20 years has specialized in
applying permanently bonded
coats to garage floors. Dave
Trexler was a mechanical engineer
for 15 years before he left the
DuPont Co. in the early ’90s and
got into the dry cleaning business.
He also worked with an employment
agency before his attempt to
improve his garage floor became
the seed for a new career.
Two months ago, the Trexlers
used the Floorguard system on
their own two-car garage. They
also installed panels of Mighty
Wall, the company’s slatted wall
system, from floor to ceiling. With
its modular cabinets, drawers,
workstations, shelves
and baskets, their
garage resembles one
depicted in the parent
company’s brochure.
Soon after their
neighbor saw the
garage, he enlisted the
Trexlers, who handle
all facets of the business,
to install flooring
in his garage.
When Hunt and his
wife bought their
house about 10 years
ago, the floor had been freshly
painted.
“But paint does not hold up,” he
says. “You drive on it, and the
heated tires blister it, and finally it
peels and looks likeamess.
“So, I’m a messy kind of guy
anyhow, and I said, ‘If I had a
garage that looked like this, I
would never mess it up. It would
always be the way I’d want to bring
people into the house.’ ”
To coat or otherwise protect amost homeowners’ to-do lists,
but there is an industry built
around the practice. Many
home improvement stores carry
epoxy products to seal a floor.
Some are available as kits;
some stores provide installation
services. (Floor preparation –
removing previous layers of
paint or sealants is an essential
step before bonding a new material
– isn’t always included in
the advertised prices, so be sure
to ask before committing.)
Alternatives to epoxy include
rollout mats or heavyduty
rubber tiles that fit together
like pieces of a puzzle.
(GarageTek is among the most
well known producers of tiles,
with an array of colors and patterns
– checkered or hopscotch
are among them – available.
RaceDeck is another tile specialist.)
The most significant competitor
to Floorguard seems to
be PremierGarage, which uses a
similar process but varies somewhat
during the preparation
phase.
PremierGarage uses grinding,
acid etching or shotblasting
to remove oil, grease, paint and
anything else that might impede
the bonding of the company’s
hybrid polymer to the concrete.
Floorguard relies exclusively
on shotblasters for garage
floors.
Trexler uses a machine that
resembles a small snowblower,
which fires thousands of tiny
metallic balls at the floor, leaving
behind a rough surface to
which the resin can cling.
Vinyl flakes, available in
three grades of increasingly fine
chips, are laid atop the base
coat. Trexler adds sand to the
sealant coat to enhance its stability.
The whole process takes two
days, plus another two days to
cure.
Hunt, the Trexlers’ 74-yearold
neighbor, was so impressed
that he had them do the garage
floors of his nearby home,
which he is selling, and the
home he and his wife recently
bought in Hockessin.
“It’s a purification of your
garage,” Hunt says. “And from
there, you can carry it on to taking
it back to trash, or building
it up to a place that is really
nice.”
That purification doesn’t
come cheap – the floor of a typical
two-car garage, Trexler says,
requires 10 gallons of resin and
100 pounds of vinyl flakes and
costs about $2,000 to install.
It’s a luxury that the Trexlers
know isn’t in everyone’s budget.
But it carries a lifetime warranty
on delamination and
wear-through.
The Trexlers know the frustration
and expense that ultimately
comes from quicker,
cheaper solutions.
Trexler had used a home improvement
store’s kit to paint
his floor and was enjoying the
reactions of his friends and family.
It looked great and was easy
to clean, he says, but after about
a year the laminate started to
peel. (Hot tires can eventually
lift the paint.
So Trexler researched his options,
keeping in mind the possible
market for a franchise, and,
after a trip to Floorguard’s headquarters,
was convinced.
Their franchise’s warehouse
is in Newark, and although
most of their business to date
has been in southeastern Pennsylvania,
the Trexlers expect
soon to be beautifying Delaware
garages.
Ron Kuzick, of Radnor, Pa.,
had his three-car garage’s floor
finished Friday. When it was
completed, he said to his wife, “I
may just move in.”
“Just think about the winter
in this part of the country,” Kuzick
says, “when you bring your
car in after riding through the
salt and the sand and the rest of
the junk. The deposits on your
floor – this, you just take the
hose and wash it out.
“It just turned a garage that
was ratty looking into something
you wouldn’t mind having
in your house.”
To schedule an appointment for a consultation in counties located in southeastern Pennsylvania, please contact Dave and Nita Trexler at 302-351-4224.
About Floorguard
Floorguard® is the most respected and trusted name in quality, maintenance-free garage systems. Its easy-to-clean flooring, heavy-duty wall systems and finely-crafted cabinetry enable homeowners to customize their garage spaces to match their individual needs and styles. Floorguard has been at the forefront of the seamless flooring industry for almost 20 years and has developed a proprietary blend of materials and processes that result in garage flooring that continually looks beautiful and last for years, even in unfavorable weather conditions. Floorguard products have been endorsed by more than 15,000 satisfied customers and are available to customers in four metro areas nationwide, including its flagship office in Chicago, and three franchises in Delaware, Southeast Pennsylvania and South Carolina. For additional information or to learn about Floorguard’s proprietary products and processes, please visit www.floorguard.com.
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