Industry guide

Industrial Food Processing Slip Testing

Industrial food processing facilities operate in the most demanding slip-risk environments in UK industry — heavy contamination with oil, water, blood, dairy, sugar or fat, persistent wet conditions, fast-paced operative movement, and BRC audit requirements that include slip-resistance specifications. Floor specifications typically reference R12 or R13 ratings under BS EN 16165 Annex B.

Sector-specific contamination

SectorDominant contaminantTypical R-rating
Meat and poultry processingBlood, fat, waterR12 / R13
Fish and seafood processingFish oils, brine, waterR12 / R13
Dairy productionMilk, butter fat, waterR11 / R12
Bakery productionFlour dust, oil, waterR11 / R12
Brewery and beverageSugar solution, water, hop residueR11 / R12
ConfectionerySugar residue, oilR11
Ready-meal productionMixed oils, water, multi-productR12

BRC and audit-driven testing

The British Retail Consortium's Global Standard for Food Safety includes premises requirements that capture slip-risk where it interacts with food safety. Floor surfaces that fail their slip specification often also fail their cleanability specification — the two sets of requirements interact. BRC audit preparation routinely includes pendulum and ramp-data review.

In-service degradation patterns

Industrial food-processing floors degrade in characteristic patterns:

  • Resin-bound aggregate floors lose their grit through sustained tyre-pallet-truck wear
  • Self-smoothing epoxy floors crack and chip at the equipment-anchor points
  • Tile-and-grout floors degrade at the grout lines first; PTV drops in those linear zones
  • Stainless or aluminium tread plate ages predictably with traffic and chemical exposure

Periodic testing tracks the rate of degradation and the timing of remedial intervention.

Wet processing zones — high-frequency testing

Processing rooms with continuous water spray (poultry, fish) and frequent aggressive caustic clean-down typically need pendulum testing at higher frequency than once-yearly — quarterly is common for high-risk lines. The cleaning regime itself is part of the slip-risk system.

New-build food-plant handover

Food-plant new-build projects close out floor handover with a combination of FM-rating verification (flatness), R-rating verification (procurement specification), and PTV testing in the as-installed condition. Together these cover the contractual, manufacturer and HSE-aligned testing requirements. Pre-handover testing.

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