"Better Building
Solutions"
Steel Frame Safety
How Safe is Your Family Home from Natural Disasters?
Steel framing systems provide homeowners additional security and safety for
their investment,
and more importantly, their family.
Steel's inherent strength and noncombustible qualities enable a steel framed
home
to resist such devastating events as fires, earthquakes, floods, and
hurricanes.
• In conventional wood framed structures, the framing material is
the third most commonly ignited material.
•
Steel framing will not burn or add fuel to the spread of a fire.
• Because of this,
many insurance companies offer lower rates for steel framed homes.
• Termites cause over
$2 billion in damage every year in the United States alone.
• Steel is impervious
to termites and other wood boring insects.
• Structural damage
caused by termites is NOT covered by insurance.
• The high strength of
steel and the positive connections provide greater protection for the life
of your home.
• Steel Framed Homes
can achieve the highest earthquake rating available in the world.
• Steel Framed Homes
can be engineered to withstand winds of 150 MPH.
• Steel Framed Homes
have proven their strength by surviving hurricanes and high winds time and
time again since 1976.
• The strength of steel also provides greater
protection from heavy snow and ice.
Experts in many fields
are looking for new building strategies and technologies that
will help sustain affordable growth into the next century.
By selecting steel framing for the structures built today,
we can answer the demand for environmentally responsible products.
Steel is the most commonly recycled material
in the world, with over 67% of all steel used today coming from recycled
material.
It takes one-fourth of an acre to produce the framing for a typical wood
framed home,
the same house can be framed with steel from the recycled metal of just
three to four junk cars!
Increasingly, steel framing is being recognized as the logical,
environmentally responsible choice for home buyers and builders today.
How does Steel Compare To Wood?
This is easily the most
commonly asked question.
First of all, wood is an organic material. It was a living organism. When
wood is cut, the wood dies.
From that time forward, wood has one objective: that is to become dirt.
Any organic organisms final state is to decompose, rot, become mulch - dirt.
Steel, on the other hand, is a Mineral. It's
strength and dimensions are absolutely consistent.
Steel will stay where you put it, for as long as you leave it there.
To fairly compare Wood Framing to Steel
Framing,
you would have to compare a Wood Frame that was built to the same standards
as a Steel Framed Home .
That means engineered to a Zone 4 Seismic, 8" exterior walls, R-30
Insulation,
Fireproof, Termite Proof, Dry Rot Proof, and without any warping, twisting,
or splitting. Simply, Steel is much better than Wood !
Does the Steel interfere with Radio & TV
Reception?
The short answer is NO!
If you understand the electronic properties of Radio and TV waves, you know
that they pass through just about anything.
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Is Steel Energy Efficient?
A good testimony
to the energy efficiency of our homes is the Centennial home built in Utah
in 1996. It has 7,000 sq. ft., three gas fireplaces, and industrial gas
fired water boiler that not only does the culinary water, but the entire hot
water snow melt system around the perimeter of the home and in the driveway.
It also has all gas appliances including restaurant grade ovens, and stoves,
as well as all gas fired fireplaces, and gas powered clothes dryers. For one
of the coldest months of the year, the owner recently said their total gas
bill for the month was $185.00.
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Does the Steel
Transfer Heat & Cold?
We're sure it does. We've had several different tests run by
independent laboratories with insulation companies.
What we've found is, "When you insulate the steel home properly, there are
certain kinds of insulation that actually draw out the heat and the cold
into the insulation, it just disperses it before it ever gets all the way
through."
We've had tests run where they put probes/sensors along an 8" stud and took
temperature variances on either side and
the report we've received back is that any heat or cold distribution
dissipates into the insulation within 2 to 3 inches into the stud,
so it never really goes all the way through.
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