
Marina Epoxy Flooring & Concrete Polishing delivers concrete flooring contractor services in Prunedale, including concrete grinding, surface preparation, epoxy coatings, and concrete sealing. We have served Monterey County homeowners since 2017, and we respond to new estimate requests within one business day.

Prunedale slabs - especially those on clay soil that has been shifting for 30 or 40 years - often need serious grinding before any coating will bond properly. Our concrete grinding and surface preparation work gets the slab flat, clean, and ready for whatever finish comes next.
Garages and workshops on large Prunedale lots take a lot of use - tractors, equipment, vehicles - and a durable epoxy coating handles that traffic far better than bare concrete. Epoxy seals the slab against oil and fuel spills while giving the floor a clean, finished look that holds up to rural property demands.
Prunedale's wet winters push moisture into every unsealed crack in a driveway or patio slab. Sealing exposed concrete before the rainy season closes off those pathways and slows the clay-soil movement that breaks concrete apart over time.
Homes built in Prunedale during the 1980s and 1990s often have driveways and patios that are worn but structurally sound. Resurfacing with a concrete overlay restores the surface without the cost and disruption of tearing out and replacing the whole slab.
For Prunedale homeowners who need their garage or workshop back in service quickly, polyaspartic coatings cure much faster than standard epoxy - often within one day. The finish is highly resistant to UV exposure and the temperature swings between Prunedale's dry summers and damp winters.
Outbuildings and workshops on older Prunedale properties sometimes have failing paint, adhesive residue, or deteriorated coatings that need to come off completely before any new work can go down. We strip and remove old surface materials down to bare concrete before applying new coatings or overlays.
Prunedale sits on the kind of clay-heavy soil that causes more concrete damage than most homeowners realize. Clay swells when winter rain soaks it and shrinks back down as the ground dries in summer. That repeated cycle puts pressure on driveways, patios, garage slabs, and walkways from underneath. Properties on the hillside roads east of Highway 101 face the added challenge of water running downslope toward the foundation and concrete flatwork. Most Prunedale homes were built between the 1970s and 1990s, which means their slabs are now old enough that deferred maintenance has started showing up in the form of cracks, spalling, and surface breakdown.
Large-lot properties and outbuildings add another layer of complexity. A driveway that runs 60 feet from the street to a detached garage is a much bigger job than a standard suburban pull-in, and a workshop or barn floor that sees heavy equipment every week needs a coating system built for that level of use. Contractors who only work residential suburban jobs sometimes undersize their prep work or coating systems for larger rural applications. We have done enough Prunedale jobs to know what the properties here actually require.
Our crew works throughout Prunedale regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect concrete flooring contractor work here. Because Prunedale is an unincorporated Monterey County community, permits for structural or drainage-related concrete work go through Monterey County Resource Management Agency, not a city building department - something that catches homeowners and contractors off guard if they are used to working in incorporated cities nearby.
The community runs along Highway 101 between Salinas to the south and the Santa Cruz County line to the north. The Moro Road corridor is the practical center of the community for most residents, and neighborhoods extend both west and east from the highway through rolling hills and semi-rural roads. Many of the properties we work on in Prunedale are set back well off paved roads, with long gravel or concrete approaches and multiple structures on the lot.
We also serve neighboring Moss Landing to the west and Castroville just south along Highway 1, so if you have work across multiple properties or need a referral, we can help.
Call or submit a form and we will get back to you within one business day. We schedule on-site visits throughout Prunedale, including properties on rural roads that take a bit of extra time to reach.
We walk the slab with you, assess the surface condition and any existing damage, and go over your options. You get a written estimate with no pressure - cost depends on the area, surface condition, and the coating system you choose.
We handle grinding, crack repair, and surface preparation before any coating goes down. Homeowners do not need to be present during the work, which matters for Prunedale commuters who are away during the day.
We walk through the finished job with you before we leave. You get care instructions for the new surface and a direct contact if any questions come up after the work is done.
We serve all of Prunedale - from homes near Moro Road to rural properties east of Highway 101. Free on-site estimates, written quotes, no pressure.
(831) 946-0604Prunedale is an unincorporated community in northern Monterey County, situated along Highway 101 between Salinas to the south and Watsonville to the north. Its name comes from the prune orchards that once covered the area's rolling hills - though today the land is a mix of residential neighborhoods, farms, and open hillside. Because Prunedale has no city government of its own, the community has maintained a rural character that sets it apart from the incorporated cities of the Monterey Peninsula. According to Wikipedia, residents have voted against incorporation more than once, preferring to keep the community under county governance.
Housing in Prunedale skews toward single-family homes on large lots, many built during the 1980s and 1990s when the area grew as a bedroom community for workers in Salinas and Monterey. Properties on the hillside roads east of 101 often have long driveways, detached garages, workshops, and outbuildings spread across half-acre or larger lots. The nearby community of Salinas to the south shares some of the same clay-soil challenges, while Castroville to the southwest is home to the Artichoke Center of the World and properties with a more agricultural character.
Heavy-duty epoxy systems built for commercial and industrial environments.
Learn MoreFast-curing polyaspartic coatings for long-lasting floor protection.
Learn MoreStunning metallic finishes that turn floors into visual centerpieces.
Learn MoreChemical-resistant urethane cement for demanding wet environments.
Learn MoreRich acid or water-based stains that add lasting color to concrete.
Learn MoreProfessional grinding and prep work for a flawless coating bond.
Learn MoreResurfacing overlays that restore worn or damaged concrete quickly.
Learn MoreSelf-leveling compounds that create a perfectly flat, smooth surface.
Learn MoreSlip-resistant, UV-stable coatings purpose-built for pool decks.
Learn MoreSafe removal of existing coatings and adhesives from concrete floors.
Learn MoreClay soil and aging slabs don't get better on their own. Call us or submit a form and we will have a quote to you within one business day.