FM-12Workshop
Workshop Matting for Hot Work Zones
A workshop rarely needs one mat. Hot work zones need fire-resistant protection, benches need anti-fatigue comfort, and dusty or oily floors need anti-slip grip. Workshop matting is about mapping the right surface to each zone.
Below we cover the zones a fabrication or engineering workshop typically has, and which matting suits each.

Zoned approach
The right matting mapped to each part of the workshop.
Hot work first
Fire-resistant grades where welding and grinding happen.
Comfort & grip
Anti-fatigue at benches, anti-slip on dusty floors.
One supplier
Specify the whole workshop floor from a single enquiry.
Matting by workshop zone
- Hot work zones (welding, grinding, cutting): fire-resistant and spark-resistant matting.
- Benches & assembly: anti-fatigue matting — flame-retardant near hot work.
- Dusty or oily floors: anti-slip and drainage matting.
- Walkways & general areas: hard-wearing rubber or workshop matting.
Start with the hot work
Map the hot work zones first, because they have the strictest requirements — sparks, spatter and fire risk. Specify fire-resistant protection there, then fill in comfort and grip across the rest of the workshop.
How to lay out a workshop floor
Walk the workshop, note what happens in each zone and what’s on the floor, then match matting to each. Tell us the layout and the tasks and we’ll suggest a sensible split of fire-resistant, anti-fatigue and anti-slip matting.
Workshop Matting for Hot Work Zones — questions
Honest answers specific to this matting type.
01What matting does a fabrication workshop need?
It varies by zone: fire-resistant matting in welding and grinding areas, flame-retardant anti-fatigue at benches, and anti-slip on dusty or oily floors. Most workshops use a mix. Map your zones and we’ll suggest matting for each.
02Can one mat cover a whole workshop?
Rarely — a hot work zone and a packing bench have very different needs. It’s usually better to map the right surface to each zone. We can specify the whole floor from one enquiry.
03Where should I start when matting a workshop?
Start with the hot work zones, which have the strictest fire and spark requirements, then add comfort and grip across the rest. Tell us the layout and tasks and we’ll help split it.
Compare nearby options
FM-01Hot WorksHot Works Matting
The hub for welding, grinding and cutting floor protection — fire-resistant matting that handles sparks, spatter and slag.
View matting
FM-02Anti-FatigueFlame-Retardant Anti-Fatigue Mats
Cushioned, spark-resistant matting to ease long welding and fabrication shifts without the fire risk of standard foam.
View matting
FM-03Anti-SlipAnti-Slip Mats for Welding & Fabrication Areas
Grip underfoot for fabrication and welding floors that collect grinding dust, oil, coolant and water.
View matting
FM-04RubberRubber Matting & Welding Sparks
Hard-wearing rubber matting for general workshop use — and an honest guide to where welding sparks rule it out.
View mattingEnquiries
Tell us about your hot work area.
Welding bay, grinding station, fabrication cell or temporary site hot work — send the process, area size and any oil, coolant or fire-classification requirement. We’ll help specify spark-resistant floor protection.
