When Polyurethane Grouting Is the Best Choice: Project Selection Criteria

Polyurethane grouting is the best choice for a slab rehabilitation when five conditions are met: the concrete slab is structurally sound, the failure mode is subgrade or void-related, operational continuity is a binding constraint, the load class is within the documented capacity of the chosen foam, and the underlying root cause (drainage, soil condition) has been or can be addressed. When all five conditions hold, polyurethane grouting delivers the rehabilitation faster, cheaper, and with substantially lower environmental impact than alternatives. When any one condition fails, a different method is the appropriate scope.
The procurement question for slab rehabilitation is not "is polyurethane grouting a good method." It is. The question is "is polyurethane grouting the right method for this specific project under these specific conditions." Method selection determines whether the rehabilitation extends the slab's service life or produces a more expensive failure within the next service cycle.
This article presents the engineering decision framework for selecting polyurethane grouting as the rehabilitation method for commercial and industrial slab projects. It identifies the five conditions that make polyurethane the best choice, the conditions under which other methods are appropriate, and the field-tested application scenarios where each method excels. The audience is specifying engineers, facility owners, procurement officers, and general contractors evaluating rehabilitation options. Every parameter and recommendation is advisory; final method selection must be validated by the engineer of record against project-specific conditions and the governing specification.
Why Method Selection Matters More Than Brand or Price
The largest single driver of rehabilitation outcome is method selection. A correctly selected method, executed by a competent contractor, produces a durable result at the lowest reasonable cost. An incorrectly selected method, even when executed perfectly, produces a failure that requires re-rehabilitation. The cost of the second remediation typically exceeds the cost of the original project by a factor of 2 to 5.
Method selection mistakes fall into two categories. Under-scoping: selecting polyurethane grouting when the slab itself has lost structural capacity and needs replacement. Over-scoping: selecting full concrete replacement when polyurethane grouting would have addressed the actual failure at a fraction of the cost and downtime. Both errors are common, and both can be avoided by applying a structured method selection framework against the documented project conditions.
Polyurethane grouting services are the appropriate scope for a wide range of commercial and industrial slab rehabilitation projects, but not all of them. The decision framework below identifies where the method fits.
The Five Conditions That Make Polyurethane the Best Choice

A polyurethane grouting scope is the correct selection when all five of the following conditions are met. The conditions are independent and cumulative: missing any one of them does not necessarily disqualify polyurethane, but it shifts the decision toward an alternative method or toward a combined scope.
Condition 1: The Concrete Slab Is Structurally Sound
The slab itself must retain its design capacity. Indicators of a structurally sound slab include no through-slab cracking, no delamination, no active reinforcement corrosion, no spalling above surface-cosmetic scale, and slab thickness adequate for the loading class. The slab can have surface wear, joint sealant degradation, hairline shrinkage cracks, and isolated surface defects without losing the engineering classification of "structurally sound."
Polyurethane foam injection restores support beneath the slab. It does not restore the slab itself. If the slab has lost structural capacity, restoring support beneath it produces a more expensive remediation later when the slab fails for the actual cause.
Condition 2: The Failure Mode Is Subgrade or Void-Related
The documented failure must be in the subgrade rather than in the slab. Subgrade failures appear as differential settlement, birdbath formation, slab rocking at joints, drainage washout under the slab, fill consolidation, or voids confirmed by ground-penetrating radar or boroscope investigation. Slab failures appear as cracking, delamination, spalling, reinforcement exposure, or chemical or freeze-thaw damage to the concrete matrix.
When the slab is sound and the subgrade is failing, polyurethane grouting addresses the actual defect. When the subgrade is sound and the slab is failing (a less common but real scenario), polyurethane does not address the defect, and another scope is required.
Condition 3: Operational Continuity Is a Binding Constraint
Polyurethane grouting's signature value is short downtime: same-shift return-to-service on most scopes, with light vehicle traffic typically permitted within 1 hour and full design load within 24 hours of injection. When the facility cannot absorb a multi-week shutdown for slab replacement, polyurethane grouting is the only commercial method that allows the rehabilitation to proceed without operational disruption.
When operational continuity is not a constraint (the facility is being decommissioned, the slab is in an inactive area, the owner is willing to absorb extended downtime for a different scope benefit), other methods come into consideration on their own merits. When operational continuity is binding, the method selection narrows substantially toward polyurethane.
Condition 4: The Load Class Is Within the Foam's Documented Capacity
Polyurethane lifting foams used in industrial scopes typically cure to densities of 4 to 8 pounds per cubic foot, supporting loaded forklifts, highway vehicles, and standard industrial process equipment. Higher-density specialized formulations are available for heavier loads. The load class on the rehabilitated slab must match the documented capacity of the selected foam.
For most commercial and industrial slabs (warehouse floors, loading docks, dock approaches, equipment pads supporting standard process equipment, public roadways, bridge approach slabs), standard lifting foams are appropriate. For exceptional load classes (heavy industrial process equipment imposing dynamic loads beyond original slab design, high-tonnage point loads, specialized infrastructure), the engineer of record validates the foam selection against the actual loading profile before injection proceeds.
Condition 5: The Root Cause Can Be Addressed
When the underlying failure mechanism continues, the rehabilitation will require future cycles. The most common ongoing root causes are active drainage defects (a failed joint sealant, a clogged drainage system, a broken downspout) that continue to wash out subgrade soil, embankment instability that produces ongoing fill consolidation, and structural overload from changed operational profile.
Polyurethane grouting paired with corrective scope addressing the root cause produces durable rehabilitation. Polyurethane grouting performed without addressing an active root cause produces a treatment of the symptom that will recur. A qualified specialty grouting contractor identifies the root cause during the pre-construction walk and either includes the corrective scope in the bid or recommends the appropriate adjacent trade (drainage contractor, structural engineer, geotechnical engineer) before injection proceeds.
The Five Conditions That Disqualify Polyurethane
The disqualifying conditions are the negative form of the five "best choice" conditions. Each is a structural indicator that a different method is appropriate.
| Disqualifying Condition | Appropriate Method | Reason |
| Through-slab cracking from top to bottom | Slab replacement | Concrete has lost structural integrity |
| Active reinforcement corrosion with delamination | Slab replacement | Concrete cannot be saved |
| Insufficient slab thickness for revised loading | Slab replacement or structural overlay | Capacity below design requirement |
| Active drainage defect not corrected | Drainage repair first, then injection | Root cause continues |
| Embankment instability with active movement | Compaction grouting, jet grouting, or embankment rebuild | Ground improvement scope, not void fill |
| Need for heavyweight structural fill | Cementitious grouting | Strength class beyond foam capacity |
| Pipe abandonment with low-strength fill required | Cellular grouting | Engineered lightweight specification fits |
| Heavy industrial point loads beyond foam class | Cementitious or specialized high-density polyurethane | Standard lifting foam below load requirement |
Polyurethane vs. Alternative Methods: Matched-Use Comparison
A complete decision framework compares polyurethane against all reasonable alternatives, not just against replacement. The matrix below positions each method against project conditions.
| Method | Best Use Case | Polyurethane Comparison |
| Polyurethane lifting foam | Industrial slab on sound concrete with subgrade settlement | Reference method for this article |
| Commercial concrete leveling by polyurethane | Industrial floor leveling on sound slab | Same method, different framing |
| Cementitious grouting | Heavyweight void fill, structural fill | Heavier, slower cure, lower environmental performance |
| Cellular grouting | Pipe abandonment, large lightweight fill | Engineered lightweight specification; polyurethane is competitive for smaller voids |
| Compaction grouting | Ground improvement, soil densification | Different scope (treats the soil, not the slab void) |
| Void fill grouting by polyurethane | Subgrade voids beneath sound slabs | Same method, different framing |
| Mudjacking (cement slurry) | Light residential lifting, low-load applications | Slower cure, higher weight reconsolidates subgrade, mostly displaced by polyurethane in industrial scope |
| Slab replacement (partial) | Structurally compromised slab section | Higher cost, higher downtime, full new-slab cycle |
| Slab replacement (full) | Comprehensive rebuild | Highest cost and downtime, full new-slab cycle |
Each method has a legitimate use case. The decision framework is not "always pick polyurethane" but "match the method to the failure mode and project constraints." The breadth of polyurethane's appropriate use case (industrial slabs with subgrade failure under operational continuity) is what makes it the most-selected method for commercial slab rehabilitation, but it is not the universal answer.
Field-Tested Application Scenarios

The following composite scenarios illustrate how the five conditions apply in real procurement decisions. Each scenario is a representative example, not a specific past project, and is provided for framework illustration only.
Scenario 1: Distribution Warehouse Loading Dock Settlement
A 50,000-square-foot distribution warehouse has 1.5-inch differential settlement at the loading dock approach. The slab is 8-inch reinforced concrete, in service for 12 years, with no visible cracking. GPR confirms subgrade voids averaging 2.5 inches deep extending 6 feet back from the dock. Operations require the dock to remain in service during work; a multi-week shutdown is not acceptable. All five conditions met. Polyurethane grouting is the correct scope.
Scenario 2: Manufacturing Plant Equipment Pad Settlement
A 10,000-square-foot manufacturing plant has differential settlement under a process equipment pad. The slab is 10-inch reinforced concrete, but the owner is upgrading to a new equipment line that imposes design loading 40 percent above original. Slab condition is sound, but the load class exceeds original design. Condition 4 (load class within foam capacity) fails; the slab itself needs structural overlay or partial replacement to handle the revised load. Polyurethane alone is not the correct scope; a structural engineer evaluation is the starting point.
Scenario 3: Public Works Roadway with Active Drainage Defect
A municipal roadway has progressive settlement at a bridge approach slab. The slab is sound, the subgrade has documented voids, but inspection confirms an active drainage defect at the abutment backwall that continues to wash subgrade soil. Conditions 1, 2, 3 met. Condition 5 (root cause addressable) is conditional. Polyurethane is the correct scope only if paired with drainage system repair. Without drainage repair, the void will re-form within a service cycle.
Scenario 4: Refinery Process Floor with Reinforcement Corrosion
A petrochemical facility has differential settlement under a process floor section. Investigation reveals active chloride-induced reinforcement corrosion in approximately 25 percent of the slab area with delamination present. Condition 1 (slab structurally sound) fails. Slab replacement of the affected zones is the correct scope. Polyurethane grouting of the subgrade addresses only the support condition and does not repair the failing concrete.
Scenario 5: Cold Storage Facility Slab on Soft Subgrade
A cold storage facility has differential settlement throughout the warehouse floor on a known soft subgrade with ongoing consolidation under freezer loading. The slab is sound. The root cause is the subgrade itself rather than a localized defect. Conditions 1, 2 met. Condition 4 (load class) requires verification given freezer point loads. Condition 5 (root cause) requires compaction grouting or ground improvement BEFORE polyurethane lifting for a durable result. The correct scope is a combined polyurethane and ground improvement program, not polyurethane alone.
The Project Selection Workflow
The decision framework operationalizes into a structured workflow that produces consistent method selection across projects. The workflow involves engineering assessment, condition documentation, alternative comparison, and engineer-of-record validation.
- Engineering condition assessment. Independent structural and geotechnical assessment of the slab and subgrade. This is not a contractor walk; it is an engineering investigation that produces a defensible scope before any contractor bid.
- Five-condition test. Evaluate the project against the five conditions described above. Document which conditions are met, which fail, and what corrective actions could address any failing conditions.
- Alternative method comparison. For each candidate method (polyurethane, cementitious, cellular, compaction, replacement), evaluate fit against the documented conditions. Identify the method or combination of methods that meets all applicable conditions.
- Cost, downtime, and sustainability comparison. Compare the candidate methods on direct cost, operational impact, embodied carbon, and waste generation. The frameworks introduced by Federal Highway Administration guidance through the FHWA Pavement Preservation program provide a useful reference for life-cycle cost analysis in highway scopes; analogous frameworks apply to commercial and industrial slab work.
- Engineer-of-record validation. The engineer of record reviews the selected method against the project specification and the documented conditions. The EOR approval becomes part of the project file.
- Contractor bidding. The selected method is bid against qualified contractors with documented experience in that method. The bid evaluation focuses on engineering substance and references, not just price.
Common Mistakes in Method Selection
Three method selection mistakes recur in industrial slab procurement. Recognizing them improves outcomes immediately.
- Selecting polyurethane on the basis of low price without evaluating slab condition. When the slab itself has lost structural capacity, polyurethane is not the answer regardless of price. The "savings" are illusory; the rehabilitation will require replacement within a service cycle.
- Selecting replacement on the basis of visible distress severity without evaluating subgrade. When the subgrade is the failure mode and the slab is sound, replacement is over-scoping. The replacement may proceed without the subgrade ever being stabilized, producing the same failure in the new slab.
- Selecting any method without addressing root cause. When an active drainage defect, embankment instability, or revised loading continues, no rehabilitation method produces durable results. The root cause must be addressed as a prerequisite or as a paired scope.
A structured selection workflow with engineer-of-record validation catches all three mistakes before procurement commits.
When Polyurethane Should Be Combined with Other Scopes
For projects where polyurethane is the appropriate method for the slab void condition but other defects exist, the rehabilitation can proceed as a combined scope. Common combinations include:
- Polyurethane grouting + drainage system repair (most common combined scope)
- Polyurethane grouting + joint sealant replacement (where joint failure contributed to washout)
- Polyurethane grouting + compaction grouting (where deep soil improvement is also needed)
- Polyurethane grouting + structural overlay (where slab needs both support restoration and additional thickness)
- Polyurethane grouting + selective partial replacement (where most of the slab is sound but localized sections need replacement)
A qualified contractor coordinates with the adjacent trades and sequences the work appropriately. The project specification identifies the scope boundaries and the engineer of record reviews the sequenced submittals.
Key Takeaways
- Polyurethane grouting is the best choice when the slab is structurally sound, the failure is subgrade or void-related, operational continuity matters, the load class fits the foam capacity, and root cause is addressable.
- The strongest disqualifying conditions are through-slab cracking, active reinforcement corrosion, insufficient slab thickness for revised loading, active drainage defect uncorrected, and embankment instability.
- Polyurethane competes with cementitious grouting, cellular grouting, compaction grouting, mudjacking, and full replacement. Each has its own use case; polyurethane is dominant in a specific (and broad) zone.
- A structured decision framework based on slab condition, failure mode, load class, operational constraints, and root cause status produces the correct method selection more reliably than vendor recommendations.
- The decision framework also identifies when polyurethane should be paired with corrective scope (drainage repair, embankment correction) for durable performance.
- Every parameter and recommendation in this article is advisory. Final scope and method selection require validation by the engineer of record.
Conclusion
Polyurethane grouting is the best rehabilitation method for a broad class of commercial and industrial slab projects, but it is not the universal answer for slab work. The five-condition selection framework (slab sound, failure subgrade-related, operational continuity required, load class within capacity, root cause addressable) produces consistent method selection across projects and avoids the most common procurement mistakes: under-scoping when the slab itself is failing, over-scoping when subgrade is the actual issue, and treating symptoms without addressing root cause.
Within its appropriate use case, polyurethane delivers faster, cheaper, and lower-impact rehabilitation than alternatives; outside that use case, a different method is the engineering answer. Every parameter and recommendation in this article is advisory and project-specific; final method selection must be validated by the engineer of record.
To scope polyurethane grouting services for a commercial or industrial facility in Texas or Louisiana and to evaluate the project against the selection framework, contact Superior Grouting.

