Project Planning

Commercial & Contractor
Planning Guide

For GCs, project managers, and commercial buyers coordinating structural steel, stairs, code-driven railings, and commercial metal packages on live job sites.

Who This Guide Is For

General contractors, project managers, commercial developers, and architects managing metal scopes within a larger construction or renovation project. This includes structural steel connections, exterior stair systems, code-driven guard and handrail systems, commercial feature metalwork, and any fabrication scope that has to land within a construction schedule.

The central planning variables for commercial work are different from residential: code exposure is higher, scheduling constraints are real, and coordination with other trades matters. This guide addresses those directly.

What Fine Edge Needs for a Commercial Quote

Commercial scopes benefit most from structured inputs. The more complete the scope document, the faster and more accurate the quote.

The most common cause of commercial quoting delays: Incomplete design documents that require Fine Edge to assume conditions. Marked-up drawings with callouts are faster to price than verbal descriptions. Even a napkin sketch with dimensions is more useful than a paragraph of text.

Code Exposure on Commercial Projects

Commercial handrails and guards in Florida are governed by the Florida Building Code (which adopts IBC with amendments). Key considerations for metal fabrication scopes:

See the Code & Inspection library for more detail. Always verify requirements with the AHJ before finalizing the fabrication spec.

Scheduling for Commercial Projects

Metal fabrication does not happen overnight. For commercial projects, lead time planning is critical to keeping the install on schedule.

Working on a Commercial Project?

Share the scope, drawings, and schedule. Fine Edge will review and provide a quote with material spec, timeline, and installation coordination included.

Related Resources

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