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Professional commercial flooring in a modern business interior.

Commercial Flooring

Red Rock Flooring provides commercial flooring services from its base in St. George, Utah. We serve Southern Utah businesses, including projects in St. George, Cedar City, and Mesquite, Nevada, along with nearby Northern Arizona communities. If you are planning flooring for an office, restaurant, hotel, bank, retail space, or tenant improvement project, we help you select practical materials, plan the work clearly, and minimize disruption.

Commercial flooring is not just about looks. It has to handle traffic, cleaning, moisture, scheduling pressure, and the reality of occupied spaces. Our team works with business owners, property managers, and contractors who need a flooring partner that communicates well, shows up professionally, and understands that downtime matters.

  • Commercial experience in restaurants, clubhouses, hotels, casinos, banks, and tenant improvements
  • Based in St. George, serving Southern Utah, including Cedar City and Mesquite, NV
  • Licensed and insured in Utah, Nevada, and Arizona
What This Service Solves

Commercial Flooring for Southern Utah Businesses, Property Managers, and Contractors

If your floors are worn out, dated, difficult to maintain, or no longer right for the space, commercial flooring becomes an operations decision as much as a design decision. You may be preparing for a rebrand, updating a tenant suite, replacing high-traffic flooring in hospitality, or renovating between occupants. In each case, the flooring has to support how the space actually functions.

This service is a good fit when you need to:

  • Replace flooring that is visibly worn from heavy use
  • Improve durability in high-traffic commercial areas
  • Coordinate flooring with a broader commercial renovation project or tenant improvements
  • Plan demolition, floor prep, and installation through one flooring partner

Red Rock Flooring supports commercial projects across St. George, Cedar City, Mesquite, and the wider Washington County area. We regularly serve properties along the River Road business corridor, medical centers near Sunset Boulevard, and sites near the Dixie Convention Center. If you are still comparing options, our guide on how to choose the right flooring for your commercial space is a useful starting point.

Two Red Rock Flooring workers using carpet puller tools to remove beige commercial carpet in an office.

Commercial Spaces We Serve

Commercial flooring needs vary significantly by business type. A solution that works well in a hotel corridor may not be appropriate for a bank lobby or restaurant dining room. We tailor every recommendation to actual use, traffic levels, maintenance requirements, and site conditions.

Offices

You need flooring that looks professional, holds up to daily traffic, and works well in hallways, suites, conference rooms, and common areas. Noise control, maintenance, and phased installation often matter here.

Restaurants

Restaurant flooring has to work hard. Entry areas, dining spaces, service paths, and back-of-house zones each have different demands. Material choice and install planning matter because cleanup, foot traffic, and schedule windows are all part of the decision.

Hotels

Hotel flooring has to balance appearance, durability, and schedule pressure. Guest-facing spaces need a polished look, while corridors, lobbies, and common areas have to perform under constant use.

Banks

Bank flooring usually needs a clean, professional finish with durable performance in teller lines, waiting areas, offices, and corridors. Traffic patterns and long-term upkeep are key factors.

Also served: retail locations, clubhouses, and tenant improvement projects. For projects where carpet tile or broadloom is the better fit, see our commercial carpeting services.

Large-format dark gray commercial tile flooring in a busy Southern Utah restaurant with diners seated at tables.

Recommended Commercial Flooring Materials

The right commercial flooring material depends on traffic, maintenance expectations, moisture exposure, and the image you want the space to project. Red Rock Flooring offers a range of products for commercial applications. You can also browse broader flooring categories on our products page.

Material Best Fit Why Businesses Choose It Main Considerations
Luxury Vinyl Plank (LVP) and LVT Offices, retail, hospitality, tenant improvements Highly durable, realistic visuals, and practical for phased installation Proper subfloor preparation and moisture control are critical
Glue-Down Commercial Grade Flooring High-traffic retail, hospitality corridors, offices, and tenant improvements Permanently bonded install, strong stability under daily commercial use, and a secure feel in busy spaces Subfloor prep, adhesive selection, cure time, and phased access all affect the schedule
Commercial Carpet Tile and Broadloom Offices, banks, hotel corridors, quiet commercial zones Acoustic control, comfort underfoot, and flexible design and repair options Face weight, backing, and the maintenance plan drive longevity
Porcelain and Ceramic Tile Restaurants, restrooms, entryways, and heavy-use zones Strong durability, moisture resistance, and easier maintenance in the right setting Subfloor preparation and schedule coordination are critical

Luxury Vinyl Plank and LVT for Versatility

LVP and LVT are often strong choices when you need durable commercial flooring with a clean, updated look. They are commonly selected for office flooring, tenant improvement flooring, and hospitality applications because they balance appearance with practicality.

See Luxury Vinyl Plank and LVT Flooring.

Glue-Down Commercial Grade Flooring

Glue-down commercial grade flooring is a strong fit when the space needs a permanently bonded hard surface that stays put under rolling traffic, carts, and constant foot traffic. It is often used with commercial vinyl, LVP, and LVT products where stability matters more than a floating install.

See vinyl flooring options and compare installation methods.

Commercial Carpet and Carpet Tile

In spaces where acoustics, comfort, or a softer professional look matter, carpet products can make sense. For some office and bank flooring environments, carpet tile is especially practical.

Visit our commercial carpeting page.

Tile for Moisture and Heavy Use Areas

Tile can be a smart fit in certain restaurant or service areas where moisture and hard use are part of daily operations. If old flooring must come out first, we can coordinate related removal services.

See dust-free floor removal or dustless demolition.

Wide view of medium-brown wood-look commercial flooring in a retail gift shop with clothing and snack displays. Commercial office lobby with beige patterned carpet showing a newly installed rectangular patch section.

How We Plan Commercial Flooring Installation Around Your Schedule

One of the biggest concerns on commercial projects is disruption. The flooring itself matters, but so does how the work is staged. For many businesses, the right plan is the one that protects operations, access, and deadlines.

When we talk through a commercial flooring installation, we usually start with questions like:

  • Is the space occupied now?
  • Does work need to happen in phases?
  • Are there customer-facing hours we need to work around?
  • Will existing flooring need to be removed first?
  • Are there delivery, access, or after-hours constraints?
  • Is this part of a larger renovation or TI schedule?

Every commercial project is unique, so the schedule needs to fit the actual site conditions and scope. We walk the site, identify real constraints, and build a realistic timeline around your operations.

Demolition and Floor Removal Planning

If old flooring needs to come out before installation, that affects both schedule and site conditions. Red Rock Flooring also offers related removal services to simplify coordination.

Occupied Spaces, Access, and Phasing

Offices, hospitality properties, and banks often need phased work. Restaurants may need tighter scheduling windows. Tenant improvement projects may need to stay coordinated with other trades.

What Affects Timeline

Timelines vary based on square footage, removal needs, subfloor condition, material selection, layout complexity, access hours, and whether it is part of a larger renovation.

Red Rock Flooring worker in a red shirt kneeling to install brown carpet tiles in a commercial retail space. Three Red Rock Flooring workers pulling up old patterned commercial carpet to expose adhesive on the subfloor.

Our Commercial Flooring Process

A commercial project goes better when expectations are clear from the start. Our process is built to help you move from scope to installation without guessing your way through it.

1

Initial conversation

We gather the basics: property type, location, current flooring, project goals, desired timeline, and whether the space is occupied.

2

Site review and measurement

We review the space, take measurements, and identify practical issues like access, prep needs, transitions, and removal requirements.

3

Material guidance

Based on traffic, maintenance, appearance, and budget priorities, we help narrow the flooring options to the ones that fit the job.

4

Project planning

We map out removal, prep, installation sequencing, and scheduling considerations, especially if the work is part of a commercial renovation or tenant improvement.

5

Installation

The flooring is installed according to the agreed scope and schedule.

6

Final review

We walk the finished work and make sure the project closes out cleanly.

This process is streamlined for accountability. Commercial projects require precise coordination, transparent communication, and consistent follow-through.

Two flooring workers laying and positioning beige commercial carpet in an office with dark wood trim.

What Affects Commercial Flooring Cost

Commercial flooring cost depends on scope, material, site conditions, and installation constraints. Hard prices without seeing the project are rarely useful, so the better approach is to understand the main cost drivers.

  • Square footage
  • Material category and product selection
  • Existing flooring removal
  • Subfloor prep or repairs
  • Layout complexity and transitions
  • Occupied versus vacant space
  • Phased installation requirements
  • Access restrictions, after-hours work, or scheduling constraints
  • Whether the project is part of a larger renovation or TI scope

Comparing Bids?

If you are comparing bids, make sure you are comparing the same scope. Differences in removal, prep, phasing, and finish details can change the number substantially. A strong bid should clarify what is included, not just present a bottom-line price.

Request a Commercial Flooring Bid

Commercial Project Examples

Red Rock Flooring’s commercial experience includes restaurants, hotels, casinos, banks, clubhouses, and tenant improvements. Here are a few named examples referenced across existing site content:

Jay Birds

Restaurant flooring work in the St. George area, representing planning needed in active food service environments.

Cache Valley Bank

Commercial carpet tile installation in St. George, engineered for high daily traffic in a busy banking environment.

Virgin River Casino

Hospitality and casino flooring renovation in Mesquite, Nevada, built to withstand constant 24/7 guest and staff traffic.

CasaBlanca

Hotel-related commercial flooring example supporting hospitality work in nearby Nevada markets.

La Quinta

Review-backed lobby carpet tile installation in Cedar City, praised for professionalism.

Commercial lobby with beige carpet, ornate red and gold area rug, sofa seating, and floral arrangements.

Commercial Flooring FAQs

What types of commercial properties do you work on?

Red Rock Flooring works with restaurants, hotels, casinos, banks, clubhouses, retail spaces, and tenant improvement projects throughout Southern Utah and adjacent Nevada and Arizona markets.

Can you help with both floor removal and new installation?

Yes. Red Rock Flooring offers flooring installation as well as related removal and demolition services. If your project requires old flooring to come out first, that can be discussed as part of the scope.

What commercial flooring material is best for high-traffic areas?

It depends on the space. LVP or LVT is often a strong fit where you want durability and versatility. Commercial carpet products can work well in some offices, hotel areas, and banks. Tile may be the right fit in certain moisture-prone or heavy-use zones. The best choice depends on traffic, maintenance expectations, and the way the space is used.

How do you minimize disruption during commercial flooring installation?

Planning is the main tool. Occupied spaces may need phased work, after-hours scheduling, or coordinated access. The right installation plan depends on your hours, layout, and whether the project is part of a larger renovation or TI schedule.

Do you serve projects outside St. George?

Yes. Red Rock Flooring serves Southern Utah and nearby Nevada and Arizona communities. Commercial relevance is especially visible for projects in St. George, Cedar City, and Mesquite.

How is commercial flooring priced?

Commercial flooring is usually priced based on square footage, material selection, removal needs, subfloor prep, layout complexity, schedule constraints, and whether the space is occupied. The most accurate next step is to request a project-specific bid.

Can you work with contractors and tenant improvement schedules?

Yes. Red Rock Flooring supports builders, contractors, and TI-related projects. If your flooring work needs to fit into a broader construction or renovation timeline, that should be part of the initial planning conversation.

Commercial hallway with light gray wood-grain vinyl plank flooring and dark wood wainscoting near glass exit doors.

Request a Commercial Flooring Bid

If you are comparing commercial flooring partners, the next step should be simple. Tell us about the property, the current flooring, and your schedule. We will help you evaluate the right next move.

Best for:

  • Office flooring updates
  • Restaurant flooring projects
  • Hotel and hospitality flooring
  • Bank flooring replacements
  • Tenant improvement scopes
  • Multi-area commercial renovations

Contact Red Rock Flooring

(435) 375-3822
1136 E 200 S Unit 2, St. George, UT 84790

Project Details