Skip to content

Sector

FMCG Production

FMCG production operators commission heavy-traffic industrial flooring for production lines, packaging halls, and distribution corridors.

Why FMCG Production Operators Specify Industrial Floors Ghana

Fast-moving consumer goods production imposes some of the most relentless mechanical demands any floor surface will encounter. Production lines run continuously across shift cycles, forklift traffic traverses packaging corridors dozens of times per hour, and pallet-jack loads concentrate tonnage onto narrow contact points with no relief. Since 1975, Industrial Floors Ghana has engineered floor systems specifically calibrated for these conditions — delivering FM2/FM3-certified superflat construction backed by laser-measured flatness reports that production engineers, facilities managers, and QA auditors can sign off with confidence.

The FMCG sector asks more of its floors than most industrial categories. Hygienic drainage requirements, chemical resistance to cleaning agents and process fluids, and the continuous vibration loads of bottling, blending, and packaging machinery demand a floor specification that is simultaneously structural, hygienic, and dimensionally stable. Fifty-one years of industrial track record means Industrial Floors Ghana has resolved these compound demands on production floors across the full spectrum of consumer goods manufacturing — beverages, processed foods, household products, and personal care.


Specification Requirements Unique to FMCG Production

FMCG facilities are subject to Ghana FDA manufacturing hygiene directives alongside internationally referenced standards for food-contact and potable-contact environments. Floor surfaces in production zones must be impervious to moisture ingress, free of cracks and joints that harbour microbial growth, and resistant to the concentrated alkali and acid compounds present in clean-in-place (CIP) wash-down cycles. ASTM F1869 moisture emission testing is a non-negotiable precondition before any resin coating system is installed — Industrial Floors Ghana conducts this testing as a standard protocol, not an optional add-on.

Flatness tolerances in high-throughput packaging halls must comply with DIN 18202 Table 3 minimum tolerances, with tighter FM2 superflat criteria applied where narrow-aisle reach trucks or automated guided vehicles operate. Production line anchor bolt positions and drainage channel integration require floor construction to be coordinated against plant layout drawings before a single pour is placed — a coordination discipline that separates a specification-grade installation from a reactive repair cycle.



Notable Project Types

Production campuses for beverage manufacturers on the Spintex industrial corridor have required large-format floor pours of 3,000 square metres and above, executed in continuous bay sequences to eliminate cold joints within active production zones. Packaging hall installations on these projects have combined FM2 superflat base slabs with seamless polyurethane topping systems — allowing forklift traffic on the structural slab while maintaining a hygienic, chemically resistant wear surface at grade.

Distribution centres attached to FMCG production facilities present a distinct specification: very-narrow-aisle racking configurations demand floor flatness tolerances measured against defined movement corridors rather than random-aisle criteria. Industrial Floors Ghana has delivered these defined-movement-corridor superflat floors across multiple distribution-attached production facilities in the Tema industrial zone, with laser-measured flatness certificates issued per corridor on completion.


Compliance & Standards