Steel Structure
Supports the stair layout and defines the system’s strength, profile, and architectural character.
A single central steel stringer creates a clean, open floating appearance. This system is ideal for modern homes that need visual lightness, efficient structure, and a refined architectural look.
Twin side stringers provide a stronger visual frame and a more defined structural presence. This system works well for wider stair layouts, longer runs, and projects that need a bold yet clean modern profile.
Clear glass railing keeps the stair visually open while adding safety and a polished modern finish. It is a strong choice for bright interiors, open-plan homes, and projects where light flow and transparency matter.
Stainless steel cable railing creates a slim, linear look with a lighter industrial-modern character. It pairs well with wood treads and steel structures for homeowners and builders who want openness with a more understated profile.
Helps determine riser count, stair geometry, tread spacing, and the overall structure needed for your project.
Defines the stair angle, walking comfort, and whether a straight run, landing, or adjusted layout is needed.
Guides the structural approach, visual proportions, and coordination with walls, floors, and framing.
Connects the steel structure with your preferred wood treads, railing system, finish color, and overall design style.
Supports the stair layout and defines the system’s strength, profile, and architectural character.
Wood stair treads add warmth, proportion, and everyday comfort to the floating stair system.
Glass or cable railing completes the stair visually while supporting safety, openness, and modern style.
Designed for modern residential interiors where openness, proportion, and material coordination matter.
Planned for outdoor residential conditions where exposure, finish durability, and railing choices require extra attention.
Send your dimensions, drawings, photos, location, and preferred stair direction so we can understand the project.
Our team reviews your layout, structure type, tread direction, railing preference, and key site conditions.
We prepare a clearer custom quote and help confirm the right system direction before the next stage.
After confirmation, the project can move into drawings, approvals, manufacturing, and delivery planning.
Helps define riser count, stair geometry, and system direction.
Shows how the stair connects between floors and available openings.
Helps guide structure, tread sizing, and visual proportion.
Helps evaluate stair angle, comfort, and layout feasibility.
Helps us understand surrounding walls, floors, and existing conditions.
Useful for confirming dimensions, openings, and project coordination.
Glass or cable railing changes the final system direction.
Wood species and finish affect appearance, budget, and use case.
Helps with shipping, climate considerations, and project context.
Helps us understand design, production, and delivery expectations.
Yes. Each stair system is planned around your project dimensions, layout, structure direction, tread preference, railing choice, and site conditions.
A typical system can include the steel support structure, wood stair treads, and a compatible railing system such as glass or cable railing. The final scope depends on your project needs.
Yes, but outdoor projects require extra attention to material choice, steel finish, railing selection, drainage, exposure, and long-term maintenance. Share your project location and site photos so we can review the right direction.
Helpful information includes floor-to-floor height, stair opening size, desired stair width, available run, site photos, architectural drawings, railing preference, tread material preference, project location, and target timeline.
Production and delivery typically take about 10–12 weeks after final drawing approval. Design review, shop drawings, local approval, and site coordination may add time before production begins.