On the job site, steel studs line up to really keep waste down. Their uniform product quality automatically means less waste during construction, especially when cut to length by the manufacturer for the job or panelized locally. Any remnant material can be recycled easily with the closest scrap processor.
Steel studs are straight and true, as well as dimensionally stable, thus helping to create a tighter building envelope that does not age in appearance or function. Good insulation design and construction easily overcome thermal conductance. The energy for lighting, heating, and cooling a building over its long service life is many times larger than the embodied energy of the building materials. Steel stud framing, which does not age or deflect around doors, windows, and other openings, can reduce unwanted air infiltration and thus save significant energy.
The high strength to weight ratio of steel allows members to be lighter weight, from standard steel stud “C”-sections to specialized joists, trusses, and panels. This results in easier handling and framing. Benefits go further, however, since transportation expense and fuel consumption are reduced as steel studs are manufactured locally or even made into needed shapes right on the job site.
In January 2000, Scientific Certification Systems, Inc. published a report called, “Analysis of Galvanized Steel Production Suitable for Residential Construction Based on Life-Cycle Stressor-Effects Assessment: A U.S. Case Study.” Among its conclusions is the finding that, for building an equal number of homes, the permanent ecosystem disruption for steel stud production is less than 1 percent of the permanent ecosystem disruption for equivalent wood stud production, even assuming harvest cycles of 70 years and no clear-cutting.
Both practical and “green”, steel studs are indeed a natural for the environment with so many tangible energy and resources savings benefits. Owners and builders can learn more about steel framing at www.steelframing.org.