10 Oct Blueprint to Build: Avoiding Costly Mistakes in Custom Metalwork Specification
Custom architectural metalwork has incredible potential to elevate your design — but small missteps during specification can lead to delays, costs, or aesthetic compromises. At Astro, we’ve learned from many projects how to steer clear of those pitfalls. Below are the most common mistakes (and how to avoid them) when working with custom metal.
1. Bringing the Metal Partner in Too Late
The mistake: Waiting until design is nearly finalized to loop in your metal fabricator.
Why it hurts: We might discover structural constraints, tolerancing conflicts, or attachment challenges that force redesigns or cut into the timeline.
What to do instead: Engage Astro during the design-assist or schematic phases. Early coordination allows us to flag conflicts, suggest more efficient detailing, and align design with fabrication from the start.
2. Relying on Approximate or Preliminary Measurements
The mistake: Designing to idealized plans without verifying real site conditions.
Why it hurts: Even minor discrepancies can derail fit—especially for tightly toleranced panels, trim, or transitions with other materials.
What to do instead: Conduct a field verification visit once rough construction is underway (before final finishes). Use those verified dimensions to lock in shop drawings and fabrication.
3. Selecting the Wrong Metal or Finish for the Environment
The mistake: Choosing a material or finish based mostly on appearance, without considering performance.
Why it hurts: Metals and finishes age differently under moisture, UV, abrasion, or cleaning regimens. What looks great in a spec sheet may degrade prematurely in a humid environment or high-traffic zone.
What to do instead: Ask your metal partner for material samples, mockups, or finish options. At Astro, we help you balance design goals with long-term durability, ensuring the finish stands the test of time.
4. Underestimating Lead Times for Custom Fabrication
The mistake: Assuming custom metal components can be squeezed into tight schedules.
Why it hurts: Rushed work increases risk of errors, coordination conflicts, and subpar execution.
What to do instead: Include realistic lead times upfront (often 4 to 12 weeks depending on complexity). Allow for shop drawings, prototyping, approval cycles, finishing, and coordination with other trades.
5. Assuming One Trade Handles Everything
The mistake: Thinking that the metal scope “just fits” and overlaps with millwork, drywall, stone, or glass without coordination.
Why it hurts: Scope ambiguity leads to clashes, delays, or finger-pointing when things don’t align at installation.
What to do instead: Define interfaces clearly from the start. Clarify who is responsible for substrate tie-ins, electrical cuts, backing, clearances, or mounting surfaces. Astro often coordinates with millworkers, GCs, and architects to ensure seamless integration.
“Early collaboration and clarity in specification make all the difference,” says Steve Paxton, President of Astro. “When architects and fabricators speak the same language from the start, we avoid costly surprises and deliver metalwork that seamlessly integrates with the vision—on time and on quality.”
Final Thoughts
Custom metalwork done right can transform a space. But to get there, you need precision, foresight, and a partner who understands both the craft and coordination demands. By avoiding these common pitfalls—and bringing in Astro early—you’ll set your project up for success, with fewer revisions, better aesthetics, and smoother execution.
 			 
 			 
