Luxury homes are no longer judged only by what you see first. Increasingly, they’re defined by the spaces once treated as afterthoughts. Garages. Showrooms. Private rooms designed for collections, performance, and use. And the most telling detail in those spaces is often the one beneath your feet.
That’s where Two Brothers Epoxy began.
Owner Tyler Gibson didn’t set out to build a flooring company. He noticed a gap.
“Floors, especially in high-end homes, should reflect the same level of craftsmanship as the rest of the property, but we kept seeing garages and private spaces being under-built, even though they often house the most valuable assets in a home," says Tyler.
Two Brothers Epoxy was built around correcting that imbalance. Not by chasing trends or pushing product, but by treating flooring as infrastructure. As something that carries weight. Literally and architecturally.
Building the company alongside his brother added a layer of discipline that shaped everything early on.
“We don’t just represent a company; we represent our family name.
Their partnership works because it’s divided by instinct. One brother is obsessive about technical execution and system design. The other is focused on client vision and experience.
“Together, it allows us to deliver floors that are both engineered and intentional. Performance without aesthetics feels unfinished. Aesthetics without engineering fail."
Leadership, in the world of Two Brothers Epoxy, isn’t about volume or speed. It’s about consistency.
“High-end clients expect transparency, professionalism, and follow through. That's trust."
Every project starts with how the space will live.
“Is it a showcase garage for a car collection, a private gym, or a multi-use estate space? From there, we design a flooring system that supports any given lifestyle.”
Their work spans premium epoxy and polyaspartic systems, polished concrete, terrazzo, and specialty coatings. What separates it from typical epoxy flooring is what most people never see.
“We consider vehicle weight, tire heat, chemical exposure, lighting, and long-term performance especially in garages that house high-value automobiles.”
That mindset aligns with how luxury homeowners are thinking now. Garages are no longer transitional. They’re curated. Climate-controlled. Designed with the same visual language as the rest of the estate.
“Floors aren’t utilitarian anymore; they’re foundational to the design.”
The aesthetic has matured as well. Loud finishes are fading. Neutral tones. Satin sheens. Seamless systems that read architectural, not industrial. Materials that don’t fight the space, but hold it together with longevity in mind.
“UV-stable coatings. Moisture-mitigating systems. Subtle flake or quartz blends."
This isn’t about impressing on install day. It’s about performing quietly for years.
The details are where everything either works or falls apart. Clean transitions. Precision edges. Consistent texture. Systems designed to age well rather than announce themselves.
“That’s where you see who actually knows what they’re doing."
The projects he values most aren’t the flashiest. They’re the ones that disappear into the architecture while doing exactly what they’re meant to do.
“Luxury garages and estate projects where the flooring complements both architecture and lifestyle and still performs years later.”
Now, looking ahead, Tyler sees the market narrowing in a good way. Higher standards. Longer lifespan systems...
"Spaces that seamlessly blend performance with luxury.”
twobrothersepoxy.com
IG @two.brothers.epoxy
"We kept seeing garages and private spaces being under-built, even though they often house the most valuable assets in a home."
