Request a quote

Tell us what you are planning.

Use the form to send location, building type, rough size, and the practical details that matter most. If you would rather talk it through live, book a design call instead.

City, state, building type, rough size, and project details are enough to get the first follow-up started. If the project is easier to explain live, book a design call.

What happens next

Your request goes straight to Steven Wright.

  • The location, category, rough size, and project notes you send are reviewed directly first.
  • The first follow-up usually tightens layout questions, site-readiness issues, and what still needs to be confirmed before pricing gets more specific.
  • If you want to speed up the next step, email photos, pad notes, or the closest example link right after you submit.

Not ready for a quote yet?

Get the free Metal Building Planning Kit before you compare numbers.

Use it to make sure your size, site, budget, and quote details are ready before you buy.

Useful first submission

Best inputs are site location, category, rough size, and the real job the building needs to do.

You do not need every final detail before sending a quote request.

What the first review checks

Expect questions about openings, access, slab, and anything that could change the right footprint.

That is how the request gets turned into a more useful pricing conversation.

Send this right after

Photos of the site, pad, access, or the closest example page make follow-up stronger.

Those details usually shorten the next round of questions.

Need help first?

Book a design call or send a simpler message instead if the project is still too fuzzy for a quote request.

The goal is to keep momentum without forcing the wrong intake path.

Pricing, timelines, and project requirements should be confirmed for your specific build and location after the request is reviewed.