Warehouse automation is reshaping distribution centers, manufacturing facilities, and logistics operations across North America. Autonomous mobile robots (AMRs), automated storage systems, robotic picking technology, and advanced material handling equipment are helping companies move products faster and operate more efficiently.
But there is one critical piece of infrastructure many organizations overlook before investing in automation:
The floor.
Durable Surfaces President Derek Cressman recently joined the Concrete Logic Podcast to discuss how robotics and automation are changing concrete floor requirements — and why traditional approaches to floor specifications may no longer be enough for modern operations.
In the episode, Derek and host Seth Tandett explore the growing connection between floor performance, automation reliability, and operational efficiency.
For warehouse operators, engineers, architects, specifiers, and automation teams, the conversation highlights an important reality:
Bad floors break good systems.
Why Traditional FF and FL Ratings May No Longer Be Enough
For decades, Floor Flatness (FF) and Floor Levelness (FL) ratings have served as industry standards for evaluating concrete floor quality.
Those measurements still matter.
But today’s robotics and material handling systems often require tighter tolerances and more precise floor performance than traditional specifications were designed to support.
A floor that technically “passes spec” may still create operational challenges when automation enters the picture.
Small imperfections can compound into larger problems:
- Equipment vibration
- Reduced robotic performance
- Sensor disruptions
- Product instability
- Excessive wheel wear
- Increased maintenance costs
- Throughput slowdowns
- Premature equipment failure
As facilities become more automated, floor performance becomes operational performance.
Understanding Free Movement vs. Defined Traffic Floors
One of the topics Derek discusses in the episode is the difference between free movement floors and defined traffic floors.
Free movement floors allow vehicles and automation equipment to travel throughout a facility without predetermined paths.
Defined traffic floors focus on highly controlled travel lanes where equipment repeatedly follows specific routes.
Each environment demands different floor tolerances and performance requirements.
As robotics adoption accelerates, understanding these distinctions becomes increasingly important when designing, specifying, repairing, or upgrading industrial floors.
The Hidden Cost of Poor Floor Conditions
Many facility leaders think about floors only when something visibly fails.
A crack forms.
Forklift operators complain about rough travel conditions.
Repairs become unavoidable.
But floor problems often create operational impacts long before obvious damage appears.
Uneven slabs and deteriorating surfaces can contribute to:
- Reduced automation efficiency
- Equipment wear and maintenance costs
- Product vibration during transport
- Increased safety concerns
- Operational slowdowns
- Unexpected downtime
When robotics systems cost millions of dollars to deploy, overlooking floor conditions can become an expensive mistake.
As Derek explains in the episode, successful automation projects require organizations to think beyond equipment specifications alone.
The slab matters.
Why Communication Matters More Than Ever
One of the biggest challenges in industrial construction and facility upgrades is ensuring everyone involved understands performance expectations from the beginning.
- Owners.
- General contractors.
- Integrators.
- Engineers.
- Facility teams.
- Concrete professionals.
When floor requirements are misunderstood or assumed, expensive issues can surface later.
Setting clear expectations and improving communication across project stakeholders helps reduce risk and improve outcomes — especially as facilities continue adopting more advanced automation systems.
What North America Can Learn from Global Practices
The conversation also explores how European approaches to floor specifications and warehouse design may offer lessons for North American operations.
As automation continues evolving, companies that proactively evaluate floor performance may gain operational advantages through:
- Improved throughput
- Reduced maintenance costs
- Greater equipment reliability
- Better long-term asset performance
- Increased operational efficiency
The future of automation isn’t just about robots.
It’s about building facilities that help those systems perform at their best.
Listen to the Full Episode
Concrete contractors, architects, engineers, warehouse operators, automation teams, and facility leaders should give this episode a listen.
Topics covered include:
- Why FF and FL ratings may not fully support modern robotics
- Free movement vs. defined traffic floors
- Measuring floor flatness beyond traditional methods
- Environmental specifications required for automation systems
- Communication strategies that prevent costly project issues
- How floor repairs can improve automation efficiency
- Lessons from global warehouse practices
Is Your Floor Ready for Automation?
At Durable Surfaces, we help warehouses, manufacturing facilities, and industrial operations solve floor problems that impact safety, speed, uptime, and automation performance.
From concrete repair and floor remediation to technical services and precision flatness correction, we help facilities make floors perform.
If automation, robotics, or material handling performance depends on your floor, let’s talk.
Schedule a Floor Assessment