OSHA 1910.22 · ANSI Z535.1 · Epoxy & Polyurea Available
Manufacturing Facility Floor Marking St. Louis
OSHA citations for missing or non-compliant aisle markings cost St. Louis manufacturers thousands in fines and increased workers' comp risk. We apply code-accurate floor marking systems — forklift lanes, pedestrian walkways, hazard zones, and 5S staging areas — in Earth City, Maryland Heights, Fenton, Hazelwood, and the St. Peters industrial corridor.
OSHA 1910.22(b)(1) — What the Standard Actually Requires
The General Industry walking-working surfaces standard is the primary OSHA authority for manufacturing floor marking. Here is what it requires and how common St. Louis facilities fall short.
OSHA 1910.22(b)(1) — Text of the Standard
"Aisles and passageways used by mechanical handling equipment or employees must be of sufficient width to accommodate the equipment or employees and any materials being transported. Permanent aisles and passageways must be appropriately marked."
Key phrase: "appropriately marked" — OSHA does not define a specific width, but enforcement action and ANSI Z535.1 guidance establish 4-inch minimum line width as the de facto standard for compliance documentation.
Unmarked Pedestrian Aisles
Any area where employees walk alongside forklift travel zones without marked pedestrian lanes constitutes a 1910.22(b)(1) violation. OSHA inspectors in St. Louis County area manufacturing facilities cite this as one of the three most common general industry findings.
Correction:
4-inch yellow lane lines on both sides of the pedestrian aisle, minimum 28–36 inches wide clear pedestrian path.
Forklift Aisle Below Minimum Width
OSHA 1910.178(n)(4) requires forklift aisles to be 3 feet wider than the widest truck or load. Aisles marked narrower than this standard create both a marking violation and a vehicle operation hazard — citations can include both 1910.22 and 1910.178.
Correction:
Re-mark forklift lane boundaries at 3 ft + widest truck width. For standard 48-inch reach trucks: 9-foot minimum aisle width, marked with 4-inch yellow lines.
No Hazard Zone Demarcation
Production equipment with moving parts, pinch points, or rotating components must have floor-level hazard zones marked in orange per ANSI Z535.1. Unmarked equipment zones are a recordable citation item when a near-miss or injury occurs.
Correction:
4-inch orange boundary lines around equipment hazard radius, with diagonal hatch fill for areas where employees must not stand during machine operation.
Faded Lines Below Visibility Threshold
Lines worn to 50% or less of original visibility are treated as absent by OSHA inspectors — a facility cannot claim "marked aisles" when the markings are no longer visible under normal facility lighting conditions.
Correction:
Full floor marking refresh using appropriate coating for the substrate and traffic type. Most manufacturing floors require 2–3 year refresh cycles depending on forklift traffic intensity.
ANSI Z535.1 Color Standards for Floor Marking
Every color in a facility floor marking system should be deliberate. ANSI Z535.1 defines the meaning. Using the wrong color for the wrong zone confuses employees and undermines the safety communication function of the marking system.
Yellow
Caution / Traffic Lanes
Forklift aisles, pedestrian lanes, general hazard demarcation, floor-level caution zones. Most common color in manufacturing floor marking programs.
Red
Emergency Equipment
Fire extinguisher locations, emergency stop button areas, sprinkler riser access, fire hose cabinet zones, flammable material storage boundaries.
Green
First Aid / Safety
First aid station locations, safety shower and eyewash station zones, AED equipment locations, emergency exit path markings.
White
Operational Boundaries
Workstation production areas, finished goods staging, non-hazardous equipment footprint outlines, general operational zone demarcation.
Orange
Dangerous Equipment
Equipment with pinch points, rotating components, or moving parts. Machine guarding boundary lines, robot cell perimeters, press and stamping equipment zones.
Blue
Informational
Non-hazardous equipment areas, informational boundary marking, work-in-process staging zones, maintenance access paths.
Source: ANSI Z535.1-2017 American National Standard for Safety Colors
Floor Marking Coatings — Matching Material to Condition
The wrong coating in a manufacturing environment fails within months. Here is the selection logic for St. Louis industrial facilities.
Epoxy Paint
Standard concrete, moderate forklift traffic
Advantages:
- +Strong concrete adhesion
- +Chemical resistant film
- +2–4 year lifespan at moderate traffic
- +Cost-effective at scale
Typical use:
Earth City and Maryland Heights general manufacturing floors
Urethane (Polyurethane)
High-traffic forklift aisles
Advantages:
- +Harder than epoxy — resists tire scuff
- +Flexible film handles surface movement
- +3–5 year lifespan in heavy-forklift zones
- +UV stable for dock areas
Typical use:
Fenton and Yarnell Industrial Park high-cycle distribution centers
Polyurea
Chemical exposure areas
Advantages:
- +Highest chemical resistance
- +Fast cure (vehicle-ready in 1–2 hours)
- +Handles moisture vapor transmission
- +5–7 year lifespan
Typical use:
Chemical storage, parts washer zones, Hazelwood McDonnell Blvd aerospace manufacturing support areas
5S Floor Marking — Material Staging and Inventory Zones
Lean manufacturing facilities in the St. Peters industrial area and Maryland Heights business parks increasingly request 5S-specific floor marking programs alongside OSHA compliance work.
5S Zone Types We Mark
Equipment Home Position
Yellow outlineL-shaped corner marks or full-perimeter outlines define the precise home position for every piece of production equipment, tools, and carts.
Inventory Staging Drop Zones
White-bordered zonesLabeled floor squares with FIFO or LIFO designations define where WIP inventory stages between operations. Drop zones are sized to the actual pallet footprint.
Quarantine Area
Red-borderedRed-bordered floor areas designate non-conforming material holding zones. Items placed in the red zone require quality disposition before returning to production flow.
Kanban Replenishment Trigger Lines
Yellow trigger linesA single line within a bin storage area marks the kanban trigger point — when inventory drops below the line, a replenishment order is triggered. Simple visual without labels.
St. Louis Industrial Markets We Serve
Earth City Industrial Park
One of the largest industrial parks in the St. Louis region, Earth City hosts distribution, light manufacturing, and logistics operations. High-throughput facilities here typically require annual floor marking refresh on main forklift aisles.
Maryland Heights Industrial
Maryland Heights business parks along Dorsett Rd and Page Ave have a mix of manufacturing and assembly operations. Many facilities in this corridor are ISO-certified and require documented OSHA compliance programs including floor marking maintenance schedules.
Fenton / Yarnell Industrial Park
Fenton's industrial corridor along Yarnell Industrial Court handles heavy manufacturing with high forklift cycle counts. Polyurethane coatings are frequently specified here for primary forklift aisle durability.
Hazelwood — McDonnell Blvd Corridor
The Hazelwood industrial corridor serves aerospace component manufacturing and related precision industries. Facilities here often require cleanroom-adjacent floor marking with chemical-resistant coatings.
St. Peters Industrial Area
St. Peters industrial parks along Mexico Rd and Veterans Memorial Pkwy have seen strong manufacturing growth. New-build facilities here frequently request full 5S implementation floor marking programs from day one.
Manufacturing Floor Marking FAQ — St. Louis
What does OSHA 1910.22(b)(1) require for floor marking?▼
OSHA 1910.22(b)(1) requires that aisles and passageways be kept clear and marked to define walking surfaces. ANSI Z535.1 and enforcement precedent establish 4-inch minimum width for aisle demarcation lines. Forklift aisles must be 3 feet wider than the widest load or truck using the aisle — those boundaries must be clearly marked.
What do the ANSI Z535.1 floor marking colors mean?▼
ANSI Z535.1 establishes the color code: Yellow = caution/traffic lanes. Red = fire emergency equipment. Green = first aid stations. White = operational boundaries. Orange = dangerous equipment/machinery. Blue = informational markings. Using the correct color for each zone creates a consistent visual language that employees can read without relying on signage.
What paint type is best for manufacturing facility floor marking?▼
The correct coating depends on substrate and exposure: Epoxy paint for standard concrete with moderate forklift traffic. Urethane for high-traffic aisle floors where forklift tire wear is severe. Polyurea for chemical exposure areas near parts washers or chemical storage. Water-based acrylic is suitable for light-duty areas only — not recommended for manufacturing floor lanes.
How wide should forklift aisle lanes be marked?▼
OSHA 1910.178(n)(4) requires forklift aisles at least 3 feet wider than the widest truck or load. For a standard 48-inch reach truck, that means a minimum 9-foot clear aisle marked with 4-inch yellow lines on both sides. Two-way forklift aisles typically require 11–12 feet minimum between line edges.
What is 5S floor marking and how is it used in St. Louis manufacturing?▼
5S floor marking defines the exact location for every item in a facility. Common elements: yellow outlines for equipment home positions, white-bordered inventory staging zones with FIFO/LIFO designations, red-bordered quarantine areas for non-conforming material, and kanban replenishment trigger lines at parts storage areas. Facilities in Earth City and Maryland Heights industrial parks commonly request full 5S marking programs.
Related Services
Schedule a Facility Walk for Your St. Louis Plant
We walk your facility, identify every OSHA 1910.22 marking deficiency, specify the correct coating for each zone, and deliver a compliant floor marking system before your next inspection window. Call now to schedule.
203 Merriweather Ln, Fairview Heights, IL 62208 | [email protected]