Avalon's gated streets off Spring Green and Seven Meadows are lined with custom and semi-custom homes — and oversized three-car garages that deserve a finish as polished as the rest of the house. Here is what an epoxy or polyaspartic floor should look like in an Avalon garage, and how we build it to last on Katy's expansive clay.
A Finish That Matches an Avalon Home
Homes in Avalon at Seven Meadows and Avalon at Spring Green were built largely between 2004 and 2015 for buyers who wanted brick-and-stone elevations, plantation shutters, and finished detail down to the garage. A bare or builder-grade painted slab undercuts all of that. A full-flake or metallic epoxy system turns the garage into a clean, showroom-grade extension of the home — the kind of detail that stands out to buyers in a neighborhood where finishes are expected to be a notch above standard Katy garage tract construction.
Most Avalon garages are three-car or three-car-tandem, which means 600 to 900 square feet of floor. At that size, color and flake blend choices matter: we mirror interior and exterior palettes, and we can run a darker border with a lighter field to visually frame larger bays.
Built for Avalon's Beaumont Clay Slabs
Avalon sits on the Beaumont Formation — the dense, expansive clay that runs under most of west Katy. This soil swells when it rains and shrinks during dry Texas summers, and that seasonal movement is the single biggest reason garage slabs in this area develop hairline and shrinkage cracks over a decade of service. We never coat over them blindly. Every Avalon job starts with full concrete crack repair and a moisture check, then diamond grinding to open the concrete profile so the coating bonds mechanically rather than just sitting on the surface.
Why prep is non-negotiable here: A coating is only as good as its bond. On clay-driven slabs, skipping crack repair and mechanical profiling is the fastest route to peeling and delamination. Our grind-and-fill process is what lets us back the floor with a written warranty.
Epoxy or Polyaspartic in a Katy Garage?
For Avalon's attached, climate-adjacent garages we usually recommend a hybrid system: a 100%-solids epoxy base coat for build and adhesion, topped with a UV-stable polyaspartic clear. The polyaspartic top resists the hot-tire pickup and yellowing that plague cheaper one-day kits, and it shrugs off the heat that builds in a closed Katy garage in July. Homeowners who want to be parking on the floor by the weekend appreciate the fast return-to-service. If you are weighing finishes, our guide on how long an epoxy floor lasts walks through realistic lifespans for each system in this climate.
What Installation Looks Like
A typical Avalon three-car garage is a one-to-two day job. Day one is moving items out, grinding, repairing cracks and joints, and laying the base. We broadcast flake to refusal, then scrape and reapply the clear coat. Edges are cut in cleanly against the slab and against the garage door track. Because we contain the dust with HEPA-shrouded grinders, there is no fine concrete powder migrating into the house — a real concern in homes this close to living space.
Neighbors in nearby Seven Meadows and Grand Lakes have had us coat their garages with the same process, so if you want to see a finished floor in person before you commit, ask and we will point you to a recent install close by.
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Ready for a showroom-quality epoxy or polyaspartic floor? Our Katy crew installs across Greater Houston with a fast, dust-controlled process and written warranty.
Call (281) 503-5313