Resinous flooring for data centers: who has EPDs?
ESD floors in server halls, PU‑cement in generator rooms, and fast‑cure systems in corridors keep hyperscale facilities humming. If your spec teams ask for Environmental Product Declarations, you need to know which resinous brands have them today, and where the gaps are. Below is a crisp, product‑level scan across six common manufacturers, mapped to the three data‑center use cases that come up most often.


What data‑center floors must do
Server halls need electrostatic control without introducing trip hazards. Battery and generator rooms want chemical resistance that shrugs off acids, fuels and thermal shock. Corridors and support spaces live on fast return‑to‑service with low odor. Resinous systems fit these jobs because they’re seamless, tough, and configurable to the risk profile of each space.
What counts as “EPD coverage” for resinous systems
EPDs for resinous floors are often published at the resin or system‑family level, not only a single SKU. In practice, that means an epoxy binder, a novolac topcoat, or a PU‑cement system can each carry its own verified declaration that supports the assembled floor specification. Declarations can be issued under ISO 14025 and EN 15804 by operators such as Smart EPD or NSF International. Product‑specific EPDs remain a recognized path to credits in LEED v5 project teams.
Snapshot date
Findings reflect public information and verified operator listings as of December 8, 2025. If a team published last week, it may not surface yet in procurement portals.
Manufacturer overview by data‑center use case
Key Resin Company (keyresin.com)
- Server halls: ESD and conductive epoxy systems are clearly positioned for static control, for example Key #520‑NT Thin‑Film ESD Epoxy, Key Conductive Epoxy Flooring System, and Key Conductive Non‑Sparking Mortar. Current product EPDs exist across Key’s resinous epoxy coating families commonly used in these builds, published with Smart EPD, with additional declarations visible for terrazzo and FlowResin Flowfresh under NSF. Examples with active EPDs include Key #510, Key #520, Key #502, Key Epocoat moisture mitigation, Key #597 MVT, Desco 6500, and FlowResin Flowfresh variants.
- Battery & generator rooms: Heavy‑duty novolac epoxy and secondary‑containment systems such as Key Contain STD are designed for acids and solvents; at the system‑family level, Key shows current EPDs for resinous floor coatings and for Flowfresh PU‑cement that specifiers can reference. Confirm the exact build in submittals.
- Corridors & support spaces: While Key’s catalog is epoxy‑centric, it offers low‑odor, low‑VOC options and decorative systems with published EPDs that suit occupied, fast‑track work. For 1–2 hour turnarounds, the scheduler may still prefer a polyaspartic or MMA topcoat from another line if speed is the gating factor.
What we found: multiple current resinous‑floor EPDs live under Smart EPD and NSF for Key’s core coatings and PU‑cement families. Product naming on EPDs can be shorter than website system names, so match by resin family in the submittal package.
Crown Polymers (crownpolymers.com)
- Server halls: Crown lists full ESD builds like ESD Conductive System and ESD Static Dissipative System using 8602 CrownPro ESD and related primers. We did not find a published EPD for these ESD systems or their component resins as of the snapshot date.
- Battery & generator rooms: CrownCrete‑U urethane‑cement systems appear across multiple thicknesses and builds (818 SL, 814 1/4, 838 3/8, 810 Skim). No EPD was located for CrownCrete‑U on operator portals or the site.
- Corridors & support spaces: Polyaspartic and epoxy options such as 8175 CrownPro Polyaspartic and 8320 CrownShield serve fast‑cure or low‑odor needs. We did not find an EPD for these products.
What we found: strong system documentation, no public EPDs discovered yet. If Crown is preparing EPDs, it has not been posted to common operator registries visible to US spec teams.
Resinwerks (resinwerks.com)
- Server halls: No dedicated ESD epoxy line is promoted for data‑center halls. No EPDs were found. The company emphasizes low‑VOC chemistry and publishes CDPH v1.2 emissions documentation for several coatings.
- Battery & generator rooms: BioCem polyurethane‑concrete family is positioned for chemical and thermal shock environments. No EPDs were found for BioCem as of the snapshot.
- Corridors & support spaces: Kinetic polyaspartics (HS, 85, SS) and MMA topcoats support fast turnarounds with low odor. No EPDs were located; emissions declarations and third‑party chamber tests are provided for several products.
What we found: transparency on emissions, no public EPDs.
PurEpoxy (purepoxy.com)
- Server halls: We did not identify an ESD epoxy system marketed for data‑center halls on the site, and no EPDs were found.
- Battery & generator rooms: Portfolio includes high‑solids epoxies and urethanes like PE‑100 and P‑AU100. No EPDs were located for these.
- Corridors & support spaces: Polyaspartic systems such as PP‑HFAST and PPS‑100 target rapid cure and low odor. No EPDs were found.
What we found: broad catalog, no public EPDs.
Rio Flooring Systems (riofloor.com)
- Server halls: Epoxy lines such as 8602‑style ESD equivalents are not prominently presented for data‑center ESD. No EPDs were found.
- Battery & generator rooms: RIO‑CRETE urethane‑mortar families (IF, HF, SF, SL, TC) and novolac epoxies (RIO‑COAT ECR) are positioned for chemical resistance. No EPDs were located for these.
- Corridors & support spaces: Polyaspartic topcoats like RIO‑COAT UPA 85 appear in public datasheets; no EPDs were found.
What we found: robust technical lineup, no public EPDs.
Vebro Polymers (vebropolymers.com)
- Server halls: vebrostatic ESD SL epoxy systems are promoted for static control in electronics and clean rooms. We did not find an EPD published for vebrostatic as of the snapshot.
- Battery & generator rooms: vebrocrete polyurethane‑concrete systems are marketed for heavy chemical and thermal loads, including phthalate‑free formulations. No EPDs were located.
- Corridors & support spaces: vebrospeed MMA systems target rapid return to service in occupied spaces. No EPDs were found.
What we found: extensive technical collateral and certifications around emissions and hygiene, no public EPDs.
Quick list: examples we linked to in this scan
- Key Resin ESD and conductive: Key #520‑NT Thin‑Film ESD Epoxy, Key Conductive Epoxy Flooring System, Key Conductive Non‑Sparking Mortar.
- Key Resin heavy‑duty chemical: Key Contain STD novolac system; FlowResin Flowfresh HF, MF, SL, SR families.
- Crown Polymers ESD: ESD Conductive System, ESD Static Dissipative System with 8602 CrownPro ESD; heavy‑duty CrownCrete‑U urethane‑cement builds; 8175 CrownPro Polyaspartic for fast‑cure topcoats.
- Resinwerks fast‑cure and PU‑cement: Kinetic HS and 85 polyaspartics, R400 MMA topcoat, BioCem polyurethane concrete; Vapor Barrier Epoxy and Rapid H2O EP for moisture‑tolerant schedules.
- Rio Flooring Systems: RIO‑CRETE HF, SF, SL, IF urethane mortars; RIO‑COAT ECR novolac epoxy; UPA 85 polyaspartic.
- Vebro Polymers: vebrostatic ESD SL, vebrospeed MMA, vebrocrete PU‑concrete.
Why EPDs matter commercially in this niche
Data‑center owners and their GC partners increasingly write product‑specific EPDs into bid documents so project carbon accounting stays consistent across packages. Without one, the modelers must apply conservative defaults, which can put a product behind peers before pricing even starts. Teams that secure an EPD for their resin system see fewer last‑minute substitutions and a smoother ride through submittals.
If you decide to pursue an EPD for resinous flooring
- Pick the PCR your competitors use for similar systems. For resinous floors, “Resinous Floor Coatings” and EN 15804‑aligned construction‑product PCRs are common rulebooks.
- Scope at the component level first. Epoxy binder, novolac topcoat, and PU‑cement can each carry a declaration that still supports the assembled floor in bids. This approach avoids analysis paralysis on dozens of decorative variants.
- Tackle data once, reuse many times. One reference year of primary plant data usually supports a family of SKUs with only minor recipe deltas. Prospective EPDs are possible for new lines, then refreshed after a full production year.
Bottom line for data‑center specs today
- Key Resin shows broad, current resinous‑floor EPD coverage across core epoxy and PU‑cement families that align with the three data‑center zones.
- Crown Polymers, Resinwerks, PurEpoxy, Rio Flooring Systems, and Vebro Polymers publish detailed system guides, yet we didn’t find public EPDs for the categories above as of December 8, 2025.
- If your brand is in the “no EPD yet” camp, the path is straightforward. Start with the workhorse resin families that serve the largest share of your pipeline. Then expand to ESD variants and fast‑cure topcoats. Do the hard yards once, then let sales carry it across many bids. Teh ROI tends to follow the first mid‑sized project win.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do ESD epoxy floors need their own product‑specific EPD or can a general epoxy EPD cover them?
Most procurement teams accept an EPD for the resin family used in the ESD system, provided the declared product and use description match the actual installation and the rule set (PCR) is appropriate. If the ESD variant changes fillers or additives significantly, plan a variant‑level declaration at the next refresh.
Our PU‑cement line serves battery rooms. Is a resinous coating PCR acceptable for an EPD?
Yes, PU‑cement flooring systems are commonly covered under construction‑product or resinous‑floor PCRs that reference EN 15804 or ISO 14025. A good LCA partner will benchmark the PCRs your closest peers already use and recommend the most bankable route.
We sell MMA and polyaspartic topcoats for fast‑track corridors. How do we handle odor and emissions claims in the EPD context?
EPDs report life‑cycle impacts, not indoor‑air emissions. Keep your CDPH v1.2 or equivalent emissions certificates alongside the EPD in submittals. Buyers often ask for both, since they cover different performance dimensions.
If a competitor posts an EPD tomorrow, do we need to redo ours?
No. EPDs remain valid through their listed expiration. Market optics improve when yours is current and not near expiry, but you do not need to republish just because a peer does.
