Exclusives

 Fabritex: Integrating Protective Coatings Into The Structural Steel Fabrication Process

Shop-applied protective coatings have moved from an occasional convenience to a standard expectation in structural steel projects.

Blake Miller, Chief Financial Officer of Fabritex

Shop-applied protective coatings have moved from an occasional convenience to a standard expectation in structural steel projects. The shift makes sense once the variables are laid out. Controlled environments eliminate the weather guesswork that plagues field application. Temperature stays consistent. Humidity gets monitored. Dust doesn’t blow across wet surfaces. For coatings industry professionals, these issues make the difference between a coating that performs as specified and one that underperforms from day one. 

Why Shop Application Changes the Game

When protective coatings get applied during steel structure fabrication, the conditions are set up for success before the first spray gun fires. Climate control means surface preparation happens at optimal temperatures, and the coating cures under supervision rather than hope. Film thickness becomes predictable because applicators aren’t compensating for wind or working around rain delays. The result is adhesion that meets design specs consistently, not occasionally. 

Field application introduces problems that shop environments simply don’t face. A crew applying fireproofing on-site might start the morning at 40 degrees Fahrenheit and finish when it’s 65 F. Dew point shifts during the workday. Dust from adjacent trades drifts into the work area. Each variable degrades performance, most outside the coating contractor’s control. Shop application removes those variables entirely. 

Timelines and Labor Economics

Project schedules compress when coatings move into the fabrication shop. Steel arrives on-site already protected, which means erection can proceed without waiting for coating crews to mobilize, set up containment, apply product, and wait for cure times. That sequencing change alone can pull weeks out of a construction timeline, and on commercial projects where carrying costs run daily, those weeks translate directly to money saved. 

Labor costs shift favorably as well. Shop personnel work regular hours in a controlled space with efficient material handling. Field crews deal with lifts, scaffolding, weather delays, and site-specific safety protocols that all add cost. The hourly rate might look similar on paper, but the productivity difference is substantial. A shop applicator can coat more steel in a day than a field crew working at height with intermittent access. 

Quality Control that Actually Control Quality

Inspection protocols in a shop setting catch problems before they leave the building. Film thickness gets measured methodically across every surface. Holidays get identified and corrected immediately. Adhesion testing happens under lab conditions rather than in a muddy staging area. This level of control is necessary for long-term performance reliability. 

Surface preparation standards are easier to maintain as well. Blast cleaning in a contained environment produces consistent profiles without the contamination risks that come with outdoor work. White metal finishes stay white until coating application because there’s no overnight exposure to humidity or industrial fallout. The cleanliness standards that drive coating performance become achievable rather than aspirational. 

Fire Protection and Intumescent Systems

Intumescent coatings particularly benefit from shop application. These systems require precise film builds and uniform coverage to meet fire ratings, and field conditions make both of those requirements harder to achieve. Temperature during application affects viscosity and atomization. Humidity during cure influences film formation. Getting both right on a construction site, consistently, across thousands of square feet of steel, strains even experienced crews. 

Shop-applied intumescents cure under monitored conditions and get verified before shipping. The fire rating isn’t theoretical; it’s been applied under the conditions that the product manufacturer designed for. That certainty matters when building inspectors review submittals and when building owners evaluate risk decades after construction. 

The Risk Transer Question

Site-applied coatings push risk onto general contractors, coating contractors, and ultimately building owners. Weather delays become claims. Quality issues surface during punch list walkthroughs when they’re expensive to fix. Performance failures appear years later when determining liability is complicated and costly. 

Shop application shifts much of that risk upstream to the fabricator and coating applicator working in a controlled environment. Problems get caught early. Corrections happen before steel leaves the shop. The coating arrives on-site as a finished component rather than a field task with uncertain outcomes. For projects where long-term durability justifies the planning, that risk transfer alone often justifies the approach. 

  

Blake Miller is the Chief Financial Officer of Fabritex, a family‑owned American fabrication company that specializes in custom structural steel and industrial metal fabrication solutions tailored for diverse applications and customer needs. He has more than 30 years of experience in accounting and financial leadership. He began his career as an auditor in 1996, advancing into cost accounting and rising to controller before joining Fabritex in 2012. He oversees financial strategy, budgeting, and operational accounting to support the company’s growth and long‑term success 

SOURCES:

https://www.duboisequipment.com/why-is-steel-coating-important/ 
https://pavco.com/blog/protective-coatings 
https://industrial.sherwin-williams.com/na/us/en/protective-marine/media-center/articles/benefits-applying-intumescent-fireproof-coatings-shop.html 
https://www.duluxprotectivecoatings.com.au/media/1520/113-mild-steel-shop-vs-site-application.pdf 

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