StaticWorx ESD floors: products and EPD status
StaticWorx is a go‑to name in static‑control flooring for electronics, data centers, labs and 24/7 control rooms. They cover multiple material families, which is great for spec flexibility. The watch‑out is disclosure. One flagship line now carries a product‑specific EPD, but the rest of the portfolio still reads light on third‑party environmental declarations. For teams chasing LEED v5 points or meeting owner policies that prefer product‑specific EPDs, that gap can quietly cost shortlist spots.


What StaticWorx makes
StaticWorx sells a broad ESD portfolio instead of a single‑material play. The range includes ShadowFX static‑dissipative carpet tile, AmeriWorx and bioSTAT ESD vinyl tile, Eclipse EC and SD rubber in tiles and sheets, interlocking ESD rubber and vinyl systems for fast installs, plus ESD urethane and epoxy coatings. They also offer conductive adhesives and a conductive underlayment to enable glue‑free installs in live spaces. See their sustainability hub for documents and claims, including FloorScore and Green Label Plus (StaticWorx Sustainability & Environmental Information).
Product breadth and rough scale
Across five core families and their colorways, formats and install systems, the catalog runs to dozens of SKUs per family. In total, that’s easily in the hundreds. This breadth lets project teams pivot between carpet, rubber, vinyl, interlocking, or coatings without switching vendors.
EPD coverage today
StaticWorx now lists a product‑specific EPD for its AmeriWorx ESD vinyl tile, verified by UL Solutions and covering cradle‑to‑grave impacts. You can download it from their site (UL Solutions EPD, 2025) (PDF).
Outside of AmeriWorx, we did not find publicly posted EPDs for ShadowFX carpet, Eclipse EC/SD rubber, interlocking tiles, or their resinous systems on StaticWorx’ documentation pages as of December 11, 2025. FloorScore and Green Label Plus help with VOC criteria, but they are not life‑cycle disclosures.
Why this matters commercially
Many owners and A&D teams now prefer product‑specific EPDs for resilient and textile flooring because they simplify carbon accounting and keep penalties off the model during bid time. In LEED v5‑driven projects, an EPD isn’t just a brochure extra. It reduces specification friction and keeps options open when procurement policies ask for third‑party verified life‑cycle data.
Likely best‑sellers with gaps
ShadowFX ESD carpet tile is a strong fit for PSAPs, network rooms and control spaces where acoustics and comfort matter. Without a published EPD, it can be harder to satisfy disclosure‑first RFP language, even if the product performance is on point. That’s where rival materials with EPDs can sneak in as “functionally equivalent” during value engineering.
Competitors you’ll meet on specs
Static control is a niche, but the competitors are seasoned.
- ESD vinyl tile: Flexco publishes EPDs covering its solid vinyl and ESD vinyl tile families, which specifiers can cite quickly when disclosure is required (Flexco, 2023) (Flexco EPD library). Forbo’s Colorex SD/EC platform lists an EPD and even shares A1–A3 carbon figures on product pages, such as 5.97 kg CO₂e/m² for Colorex SD in one configuration (Forbo, 2024) (Forbo Colorex SD).
- ESD rubber: nora by Interface shows EPD coverage for electrostatically dissipative rubber, including norament 928 ed, via IBU and UL channels (nora/IBU, 2024) (nora certificates).
These are common alternates in electronics, cleanrooms, labs, healthcare support areas and mission‑critical corridors. When an owner mandates EPDs, these options often become the low‑risk path for the design team.
Where StaticWorx is strong
- Portfolio flexibility for different environments, including glue‑free options that minimize downtime in live sites.
- Clear ESD performance positioning against ANSI/ESD S20.20 and related body‑voltage tests.
- A first EPD stake in the ground for AmeriWorx that makes vinyl specs easier to keep.
Where coverage could improve fast
Adding product‑specific EPDs for ShadowFX carpet and Eclipse rubber would close the most visible gap. Rubber, in particular, is a hero material in ESD and ergonomic spaces. An EPD there would neutralize a key competitor talking point and simplify substitutions that currently flip to rivals with published declarations. Interlocking systems and resinous coatings can follow, but flooring workhorses should go first.
Practical next steps for manufacturers
- Prioritize EPDs for the highest‑volume lines and the SKUs most likely to be swapped during VE.
- Align PCR choices with what competitors use so reviewers can make easy apples‑to‑apples calls.
- Keep FloorScore and Green Label Plus in the bundle for IAQ, but lead with EPDs in submittals.
A closing thought
In ESD, performance is the ticket to enter. Disclosure keeps you in the room. With AmeriWorx now covered, rounding out carpet and rubber would make StaticWorx markedly harder to displace on EPD‑aware projects. EPDs definately pay for themselves the first time you keep a spec instead of losing it to a “same performance, but with an EPD” sub.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does StaticWorx have a product‑specific EPD today and for which line?
Yes. StaticWorx publishes a UL‑verified, product‑specific EPD for AmeriWorx ESD vinyl tile, covering cradle‑to‑grave impacts (UL Solutions EPD, 2025) (PDF).
Which StaticWorx lines appear to lack public EPDs at the time of writing?
We did not find posted EPDs on StaticWorx’ documentation pages for ShadowFX ESD carpet, Eclipse EC/SD rubber, interlocking tiles, or resinous coatings as of December 11, 2025. Their site lists VOC and certification docs like FloorScore and Green Label Plus instead.
Who are common competitors with EPDs in ESD flooring?
- Flexco lists EPDs for solid and ESD vinyl tile lines (Flexco, 2023) (Flexco EPD library).
- Forbo publishes EPDs for Colorex SD/EC ESD vinyl (Forbo, 2024) (Forbo Colorex SD).
- nora by Interface shows EPDs for ESD rubber such as norament 928 ed via IBU and UL (nora/IBU, 2024) (nora certificates).
If an owner mandates EPDs, which StaticWorx line is the easiest keep on spec right now?
AmeriWorx ESD vinyl tile, because it has a product‑specific EPD posted. Carpet and rubber lines would benefit from adding EPDs to reduce substitution risk.
Where can teams find StaticWorx’ sustainability docs quickly?
Their consolidated hub includes the AmeriWorx EPD link, FloorScore, Green Label Plus and LEED information (StaticWorx Sustainability & Environmental Information).
