Careers
Commercial and industrial flooring careers in Colorado
Colorado Concrete Repair works on warehouse floors, loading bays, pharmaceutical interiors, food-manufacturing spaces, municipal facilities, polished concrete projects, and concrete repair scopes across the Denver metro and Front Range. We hire people who want to work on serious commercial projects — not residential garage-floor volume work.

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Commercial Focus
CCR’s projects are commercial, industrial, municipal, and institutional — warehouses, production spaces, loading docks, schools, labs, and public facilities.
AGC Member
The company is a member of Associated General Contractors and works in environments where coordination, professionalism, and site discipline matter.
Colorado Project Mix
Project history includes six-figure loading bay work, food and pharma floors, municipal resurfacing, polished concrete, and concrete repair across the Front Range.
Why work at CCR
CCR is not built around residential turnover work. The company’s core projects involve commercial concrete repair, industrial prep, epoxy and urethane systems, polished concrete, joints, patching, and floor rehabilitation in active facilities. That matters for people who want a trade career with more technical range. One month may include warehouse floor resurfacing, the next may include pharmaceutical flooring, food-manufacturing renovation, or polished concrete in a school or dealership environment.
The work is demanding and practical. You are expected to show up on time, follow field procedures, keep the site organized, respect active facilities, and learn the difference between a rushed install and a professional one. CCR’s reputation is tied to prep, sequencing, and finish quality, so employees who do well here usually care about doing the work correctly, not just quickly.
What CCR does
Commercial concrete repair, joint repair, slab prep, grinding, shot blasting, epoxy flooring, urethane cement, polished concrete, specialty coatings, and resurfacing for industrial and institutional clients.
Who fits here
People who can work safely, learn field systems, communicate with supervisors, handle physically demanding days, and care about the quality of the finished floor.
What this is not
It is not residential garage-floor sales volume, not light handyman work, and not a desk-only environment. The field team works in real commercial job conditions.
Positions typically available
Flooring installers
Installers support surface preparation, patching, grinding, joint work, material mixing, coating placement, broadcast systems, and cleanup. Strong candidates are dependable, physically capable, willing to learn equipment, and comfortable working in warehouse, manufacturing, and institutional environments.
Project managers
Project managers coordinate scope, scheduling, material planning, subcontract and client communication, documentation, and jobsite sequencing. The role suits people who understand field realities and can keep commercial projects moving without losing control of quality or safety.
Estimators
Estimators help convert site conditions into scopes, quantities, systems, and pricing. The job requires careful observation, commercial judgment, and the ability to distinguish between a simple coating request and a project that really needs repair, moisture mitigation, or phased sequencing.
Physical requirements
- Lift and move tools, materials, and hoses on active jobsites
- Stand, kneel, bend, and work on concrete for extended periods
- Operate or assist with grinders, vacuums, mixers, and prep equipment
- Work early shifts, shutdown windows, or phased commercial schedules when needed
- Follow PPE, dust-control, and jobsite safety requirements consistently
Experience in coatings, concrete, construction, flooring, or industrial maintenance is valuable, but CCR also needs people who can be trained and who take field discipline seriously. The fastest way to stall out in this kind of work is to ignore prep standards, housekeeping, or site communication.
For installers, the work is hands-on and visible. You can see whether prep was done correctly, whether material placement stayed clean, and whether a repair actually tied back into the floor the way it should. For project managers and estimators, the responsibility is different but just as real: set the job up correctly, define scope honestly, and avoid promising an easy answer when the slab conditions say otherwise.
People who succeed in this environment usually share a few habits. They ask questions before guessing. They keep tools and hoses organized. They understand that dust control and cleanup are part of the craft. They can work with crews, clients, and superintendents without drama. And they take pride in leaving behind a floor that performs, not just one that looks good on the day of turnover.
HOW TO APPLY
Send your information and relevant experience
If you are interested in flooring installer, project management, or estimating opportunities with CCR, use the contact form on this page or call the office. Include your work history, certifications, equipment experience, and whether you have worked in commercial or industrial environments.
On the company side, hiring decisions work a lot like a site assessment: CCR looks for fit between the candidate’s experience, the project mix, and the field conditions the team handles every day.
Applicants who stand out usually explain the type of work they have done: coatings, prep, repair, concrete polishing, warehouse construction, commercial finish trades, industrial maintenance, scheduling, or estimating. Clear information helps CCR assess fit faster.
If you are early in your career, be direct about that too. Reliability, willingness to learn, and comfort in a physically demanding field environment can matter as much as a perfect resume. If you are experienced, say what systems, project sizes, and facility types you have handled so CCR can match your background to current needs.
