Steel vs wood framing cost
Cost, speed, fire, and durability, how cold-formed steel compares to wood for California homes.
Read →Two different steels with two different jobs. How cold-formed light gauge framing and hot-rolled structural steel compare, when you need each, and how they work together on one building.
Light gauge steel and structural steel are two different products with two different jobs. Cold-formed light gauge steel is thin, roll-formed framing that builds the shell of a building: walls, floors, and roofs. Hot-rolled structural steel is heavy beams, columns, and tube that carry large concentrated loads and resist lateral and seismic forces. Most California buildings use light gauge steel for the framing and structural steel for the heavy load paths, and Cal Steel fabricates and erects both in-house.
The difference starts with how the steel is made. Light gauge steel, also called cold-formed steel (CFS), is roll-formed at room temperature from thin galvanized coil into studs, tracks, joists, and trusses. Structural steel is hot-rolled at the mill into thick shapes like wide-flange (W) beams, columns, and hollow structural sections (HSS). Light gauge is measured in gauges and mils of thickness; structural members are far thicker and heavier per foot.
That physical difference drives everything else: where each is used, how it connects, and what it can carry.
You reach for structural steel when loads, spans, or forces exceed what cold-formed framing can carry on its own. Common triggers include:
For more on these heavy load paths, see Cal Steel's structural steel capability.
On most projects they are not either/or, they are layered. A building frames its repetitive floors, walls, and roof in light gauge steel for speed and non-combustibility, then uses structural steel beams and columns exactly where loads concentrate: at a transfer level, over a long span, around a stair or elevator core, and within the lateral system that resists seismic forces.
Done well, the structural steel skeleton and the light gauge framing are detailed together so loads pass cleanly from the cold-formed shell into the hot-rolled members and down to the foundation. The same integrated approach carries into modular volumetric construction, where steel-framed modules can be set on or tied into a structural steel podium.
Yes. Cal Steel fabricates and erects both systems in-house. It roll-forms and panelizes light gauge steel and fabricates structural steel in its 100,000 square foot Van Nuys facility, with additional manufacturing in Tecate, and erects with its own crews. Cal Steel engineers each project as a 3D digital twin in Vertex BD with AutoCAD and Revit BIM, welds to AWS D1.1, and is a Los Angeles City Approved fabricator and erector certified to ICC-ES ESR-4905. Because both systems come from one accountable team, the cold-formed shell and the structural skeleton are designed to work together rather than coordinated across separate vendors.
Light gauge steel is thin cold-formed steel roll-formed from galvanized coil into studs, tracks, joists, and trusses to frame the building shell. Structural steel is heavy hot-rolled steel, such as wide-flange beams, columns, and HSS tube, used to carry large concentrated loads and resist lateral and seismic forces. Light gauge connections are screws and clinching; structural connections are bolted and welded.
Structural steel is used when loads or spans exceed what cold-formed framing can carry: taller buildings, transfer levels over open ground floors, podium structures, long clear spans, and dedicated lateral or seismic systems such as braced frames and moment frames. Many California buildings use light gauge steel for the shell and structural steel for these heavy load paths.
Yes, and they often are. A typical project frames floors, walls, and roofs in light gauge steel, then uses structural steel beams, columns, and frames at transfer levels, long spans, and the lateral system. Cal Steel fabricates and erects both in-house, so the two systems are detailed to work together.
For more answers across light gauge steel, structural steel, and modular, see the Cal Steel FAQ.