Building type
Factory and Manufacturing Plant Coating and Cladding Spraying
A working factory is a harder environment than a plain storage shed. Process heat, fumes and extraction attack the envelope locally, and the place cannot simply stop. So the coating has to be specified to how the plant actually runs, and every job starts with a free survey.

Sector route
The right coating route depends on how the building is used
A working factory is a harder environment than a plain storage shed. Process heat, fumes and extraction attack the envelope locally, and the place cannot simply stop. So the coating has to be specified to how the plant actually runs, and every job starts with a free survey.
- Specified to the plant The survey maps where process heat, fumes and extraction hit hardest, so the coating is matched to the real exposure rather than a one-size approach.
- Keep production running Most roof work is done from above and sequenced around shifts and deliveries, so the line keeps moving while the building is protected.
- One contractor for the whole envelope Roof, cladding, cut edges and walls are handled together, so a mixed older plant is dealt with as one coordinated job.
What matters here
Key considerations for this sector
Coating factories and manufacturing plants
A working factory is a harder environment than a plain storage shed. Extraction outlets, flues, warm processes and airborne residues all attack a roof and cladding locally, so two parts of the same building can be in very different condition. We are an exterior coatings contractor, and our job is to read those differences at survey and specify accordingly, rather than force one generic coating across the whole envelope.
Because we survey before we recommend anything, we can be straight about whether coating and cladding spraying will protect the building or whether a worn section needs localised repair or replacement first. The aim is a sound, weather-tight plant that keeps running, not an upsell.
- Roof coatings for profiled-metal and composite factory roofs
- Cladding spraying for an even, factory-style finish on tired elevations
- Cut-edge corrosion treatment on the exposed edges, laps and fixings
- Wall coatings for rendered, brick and clad production buildings
Process heat, fumes and a live production floor
Where a roof or wall sits above or beside warm processes and extraction, it ages faster, so the survey maps where the building takes the hardest punishment and the specification reflects it. The programme matters just as much: production rarely pauses, so the work is sequenced around shifts, deliveries and site inductions, with most roof work done from above so the line keeps running below.
Older plants often mix several substrates, profiled metal, rooflights, rendered or brick elevations and tired cladding, each needing its own prep route. Cut-edge corrosion is treated as prep, with the edges and laps cleaned back, treated and sealed before any topcoat.
We work on commercial and industrial buildings across the UK. Whether your site sits in Oxfordshire, the South West, the Midlands or further afield, the route is the same: a free survey first, then a written recommendation. See the areas we cover for the towns and cities we work in.
Related support
Relevant coating services
Industrial Roof CoatingsRoof coating for warehouses and factories, sequenced around live production so the place keeps running.Read more
Cladding SprayingOn-site respray for faded, chalky cladding. A sharp finish without ripping off panels that are still worth keeping.Read more
Industrial Wall CoatingsTough coating for factory, workshop and warehouse walls that take a beating, planned around a working site.Read more
Cut Edge Corrosion TreatmentRust creeping out of metal sheet edges and laps, stopped before it eats the roof. Caught early, it is a repair, not a re-roof.Read moreAccredited, insured & nationwide

How we work
Survey first, then specify
Common questions
Factory and Manufacturing Plant Coating and Cladding Spraying FAQs
Does process heat or extraction affect the coating you use?
Yes. Areas around flues, extraction outlets and warm processes age faster, so the survey identifies them and the specification accounts for the extra exposure rather than treating the whole roof the same.
Can you coat the roof while production continues below?
Usually, yes. Most factory roof coating is carried out from above with the plant in use. The survey identifies anything that genuinely needs internal access or a controlled shutdown, and the programme is built around shifts, deliveries and site inductions.
Our plant has a metal roof, rooflights and brick walls. Can you handle all of it?
Yes. Mixed envelopes are common on older plants. Each substrate gets its own prep and coating route, decided at survey, so the whole building is treated correctly rather than just the easy areas.
What about cut-edge corrosion on the sheet roof?
It is treated as part of the prep. The exposed edges, laps and fixings are cleaned back, treated and sealed before any coating, so the corrosion does not come straight back through the new system.
Can a coating improve how the factory looks as well as protect it?
Yes. Cladding spraying restores an even, factory-style finish to tired elevations, which protects the panels and presents a better image to staff, visitors and customers at the same time.
Get a free site survey, no obligation
One of our surveyors walks the building, photographs the condition and quotes only what it actually needs. Send us the details and we'll come back with a clear, practical route, not a hard sell.
Book your free site surveyWhat does your building need?
Pick the surface, then the problem. We will point you to the right service.
