Ferry port, naval heritage and the Pembroke Power Station.
Pembroke Dock (Doc Penfro) sits within the Pembrokeshire principal area of West Wales. Its commercial profile centres on industrial & manufacturing, which shapes the type of slip-testing work we typically carry out here.
What we test in Pembroke Dock.
Industrial premises in Pembroke Dock bring oil, coolant, swarf, chemical spillage and constant wash-down cycles — surfaces that look compliant dry can fail dramatically when tested wet.
- Production-line operator zones
- Forklift traffic routes
- Wash-down bays and chemical handling
- Mezzanine and stair access
- Canteen and welfare blocks
Attendance in Pembroke Dock is coordinated with our wider Pembrokeshire schedule. Most site visits are booked within 7–14 working days; urgent post-incident attendance can often be arranged faster. All reporting is UKAS ISO/IEC 17025 accredited and delivered within 48 hours of the site visit.
Why Pembroke Dock businesses test their floors.
Every commercial premises in Wales — whether a corner shop in Pembroke Dock or a multi-site retailer operating across Cymru — carries a statutory duty under the Workplace (Health, Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1992 to assess and manage slip risk. Insurance providers increasingly require documented PTV evidence at renewal, particularly where a previous claim has been filed or defended.
The pendulum test is the method HSE explicitly references for assessing slip resistance under wet conditions — the conditions in which the overwhelming majority of slip incidents actually occur. A dry-only reading tells you very little about how a floor performs when spillage, rain drag-in, cleaning water or other contaminants are present.