Steel Structure

Prefabricated Steel Structure Materials: Advantages, Applications & Efficiency Gains

Prefabricated steel vs. site-welded steel. Learn material efficiency, cost savings, design flexibility, and why pre-engineered buildings outperform traditional construction for overseas projects.

Time is money. Labor is expensive. Weather delays are unpredictable. For overseas clients managing warehouses, workshops, or industrial facilities, the traditional “cut and weld on site” approach is dying.

The better way? Prefabricated steel structures—also called pre-engineered buildings (PEBs). Components are designed, fabricated, and coated in a controlled workshop, then shipped to site for bolt-up assembly.

This guide covers:

  • Materials used in prefabricated steel structures.
  • Processing characteristics (cutting, welding, drilling).
  • Efficiency advantages vs. site construction.
  • Cost savings and design/installation matching.
  • Applications in modern steel buildings.

1. What Are Prefabricated Steel Structures?

A prefabricated steel structure means the primary components—columns, rafters, beams, bracing, purlins, and connections—are manufactured in a factory to precise drawings, then delivered to site for mechanical assembly (bolted or pinned, not welded).

Typical components:

ComponentMaterialFabrication
Main frame (columns/rafters)Q355B welded H-sectionFull penetration welds, drilled end-plates
Secondary framing (purlins/girts)Q235B or Q355B C/Z sectionsCold-formed, pre-punched holes
Bracing (roof/wall)Q235B round bar or anglePre-cut, threaded ends
Connections (bolts/plates)Q355B plate + Grade 8.8 boltsLaser-cut, CNC drilled
Base platesQ355B thick plateCut, drilled, welded to column

Not prefabricated: Concrete foundations, field welding of main splices, on-site cutting for fit-up.

2. Materials Used in Prefabricated Steel Components

The material selection for prefabricated steel is similar to conventional steel, but with higher requirements for consistency and weldability.

A. Main Frame Material: Welded H-Section (Built-Up)

Most prefabricated buildings use welded built-up H-sections, not hot-rolled sections. Why?

AspectHot-Rolled H-BeamWelded Built-Up H-Section
Size flexibilityLimited to mill standardsAny depth, flange width, thickness
Material efficiencyConstant section (wastes steel)Tapered or variable thickness
Cost for non-standard spansHigher (oversized)Lower (exactly sized)
Lead timeStock dependent10-15 days fabrication

Typical material for welded H-sections:

  • Flanges: Q355B (thickness 8-40mm)
  • Web: Q355B or Q235B (thickness 6-25mm)
  • Welding process: Submerged arc welding (SAW) for straight seams

B. Secondary Framing: Cold-Formed Steel

Purlins (roof) and girts (wall) are typically cold-formed from hot-rolled coil.

GradeYield StrengthTypical Use
Q235B235 MPaLight roofs, small spans
Q355B355 MPaStandard industrial, longer spans
S350GD (galvanized)350 MPaCorrosion-resistant, pre-galvanized

Key prefabrication advantage: Pre-punched holes for bolted connections. No field drilling needed.

C. Connection Materials

ComponentMaterialPrefabrication Detail
End platesQ355B plate, 12-25mm thickLaser-cut, CNC drilled, welded to beam ends
BoltsGrade 8.8 (high-strength) or 4.6Supplied with nuts/washers, pre-counted per joint
Bracing rodsQ235B round bar, 12-20mm diaThreaded ends, pre-cut to exact length
Shear studsQ235B headed studWelded to beams in workshop (for composite floors)

3. Processing Characteristics: Why Workshop Fabrication Wins

Prefabrication is not just about moving work indoors. The processing methods themselves create higher quality.

A. CNC Cutting (Plasma/Laser)

  • Tolerance: ±1mm for plates, ±2mm for long beams
  • Benefit: Holes align perfectly on site. No reaming or slotting.

B. Submerged Arc Welding (SAW)

  • Process: Automatic welding with flux coverage
  • Benefit: Deeper penetration, no spatter, consistent strength. Superior to site stick welding.

C. CNC Drilling & Punching

  • Process: Multi-spindle drill lines for beams, punch presses for angles
  • Benefit: All bolt holes factory-drilled. No layout errors.

D. Abrasive Blasting & Shop Priming

  • Process: Sa2.5 blast cleaning + 60-80µm epoxy primer
  • Benefit: Steel arrives clean and protected. No site blasting needed.

E. Tapered Section Fabrication

  • Process: Web plate cut with variable depth, then welded to flanges
  • Benefit: Matches bending moment diagram (deeper at mid-span, shallower at ends). Saves 20-30% steel weight vs. constant section.

4. Efficiency Advantages of Prefabricated Steel

This is the core selling point for overseas clients. Prefabrication delivers three forms of efficiency:

A. Construction Speed Efficiency

Construction MethodSite Man-Hours (per 1000m²)Total Project Time
Site-welded steel800-12008-12 weeks (steel only)
Prefabricated (bolted)200-3002-3 weeks (steel only)

Why faster:

  • No waiting for welders (hard to find in many markets).
  • No weather delays (rain/wind stop site welding).
  • No layout or cutting decisions on site. Just align, insert bolts, torque.

Real-world example: A 2000m² warehouse. Prefabricated frame delivered in 15 days. Erected by 4 workers in 5 days. Site-welded equivalent would take 4 weeks of welding plus 2 weeks of fitting.

B. Labor Efficiency & Skill Requirements

TaskSite-WeldedPrefabricated
Required skillCertified welder (high cost, scarce)General labor + bolt tightening
Crew size6-8 (welders + fitters + helpers)3-4 (with simple tools)
SupervisionFull-time engineerOccasional inspection
Safety riskHigh (fire, arc eye, fumes)Low (mechanical assembly)

C. Material Efficiency (Less Waste)

Waste SourceSite-WeldedPrefabricated
Cutting scraps5-10% (site cutting is rough)2-3% (nested CNC cutting)
Rework due to errors3-8% (mis-measured field cuts)<1% (drawings match fabrication)
Excess material “just in case”10-15% (site uncertainty)0% (exactly what is needed)

Total material savings: 10-20% with prefabrication.

5. Cost Savings Breakdown

For overseas buyers, the total installed cost matters more than material cost.

Cost ElementSite-WeldedPrefabricatedSavings
Material (steel)$100-130/m²$80-110/m²15-20%
Site labor$40-60/m²$10-20/m²60-75%
Equipment (crane, lifts)$15-25/m²$8-12/m²40-50%
Quality/repairs$5-15/m²$2-5/m²50-70%
Total installed$160-230/m²$100-147/m²35-40%

Hidden savings:

  • Faster completion means earlier revenue (for commercial buildings).
  • Lower financing costs (shorter construction loan period).
  • Reduced site theft (fewer material deliveries, less loose steel).

6. Matching Prefabricated Steel to Design & Installation

Prefabricated steel is not a “one-size-fits-all” product. Proper design integration is required.

A. Design for Prefabrication (DfP)

Design AspectConventional ApproachPrefabrication-Friendly
Column spacingArbitrary (changes often)Standardized modules (e.g., 6m, 7.5m, 9m)
Connection typeField welded or mixedBolted end-plates (consistent)
Beam depthsMultiple different sizes2-3 standard depths repeated
BracingField-cut anglesPre-threaded rods with turnbuckles
Hole sizesStandard clearanceOversized for adjustment (2mm extra)

Standardization tip: Limiting your project to 3 beam depths and 2 column sizes drastically reduces fabrication cost without sacrificing performance.

B. Installation Matching (Site Readiness)

For a smooth installation, the prefabrication package must include:
Marked components: Every beam/column labeled with location (e.g., “A1-C1 Roof Beam”)
Assembly drawings: Step-by-step erection sequence
Pre-assembled connection kits: Bags of bolts/nuts/washers per joint
Base plate templates: For anchor bolt verification before shipment
What overseas clients should request:
“Provide a digital installation manual with 3D isometric views showing each bolt-up connection. Include a bolt kit list by column grid.”

7. Applications in Modern Steel Buildings

Prefabricated steel is suitable for a wide range of project types.

Building TypeTypical SpanWhy Prefabricated Works
Warehouses / distribution centers20-40mClear spans, fast erection, future expandable
Industrial workshops12-25mCrane beams integrated, heavy duty
Agricultural buildings10-20mLow cost, simple assembly (local labor)
Commercial showrooms15-30mArchitectural finishes possible (cladding systems)
Aircraft hangars30-50m+Tapered rafters for long spans
Sports halls / gymnasiums25-40mClear interior, no columns

Emerging application: Multi-story prefabricated steel offices (up to 8 stories) using bolted moment connections.

8. Common Concerns & Myths (Addressed for Overseas Clients)

“Is prefabricated steel weaker than site-welded?”
No. Workshop welding is more controlled (temperature, humidity, procedure). SAW welds are stronger than manual stick welding.

“What if my foundation bolts are off by 20mm?”
Design with slotted holes on base plates (±25mm adjustment) and leveling nuts. Good prefabrication includes this tolerance.

“Can I modify the building later?”
Yes. Bolted connections can be unbolted. Add bays by unbolting end walls, inserting new frames.

“Is prefabricated steel more expensive delivered?”
Upfront material + fabrication may be similar, but installed cost is 35-40% lower due to labor and speed savings.

9. Link to Prefabricated Steel Component Custom Service

Not all prefabricated steel is equal. Some suppliers just cut and ship. Others engineer for your specific site.

We provide full prefabrication services:

  • Engineering & detailing: 3D modeling, connection design, shop drawings
  • Material sourcing: Q355B plates, cold-formed purlins, Grade 8.8 bolts
  • Workshop fabrication: CNC cutting, SAW welding, CNC drilling
  • Surface treatment: Sa2.5 blast + primer or HDG
  • Marking & packing: Labeled components, bolt kits, packing lists
  • Installation support: Digital manual, video guides, remote consultation

For overseas clients:
We optimize for container shipping (component lengths under 12m or spliced). We provide bolted connections only—no field welding. We can install one bay at our yard and send you verification photos before bulk production.

👉 [Request a prefabricated steel quote]
Send us your building dimensions, local wind/snow loads, and intended use. We will return a frame design, weight estimate, and budget price within 48 hours.

Summary: Prefabricated Steel vs. Site-Welded

FactorPrefabricated SteelSite-Welded Steel
Speed2-3 weeks8-12 weeks
Labor skillGeneralCertified welders
Quality controlWorkshop (consistent)Field (variable)
Weather impactNone (indoor fab)High
Waste2-3%8-15%
Installed cost per m²$100-150$160-230
Modifiable laterYes (bolted)Difficult (welded)

Verdict: For clear-span buildings over 500m², prefabricated steel is faster, cheaper, and higher quality.

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