25th February

Why specifiers are rethinking façade materials

The dead load problem

Stone, concrete, and masonry add enormous dead load to buildings, which has a cascading effect. It means that foundations need to be deeper and stronger, structural steelwork needs to be heavier, and floor plates need to be thicker. In a market where construction costs remain high and project viability is ever precarious, every kilogram matters. Aluminium with a stone-effect powder coat can be significantly lighter than the ‘real thing’ for cladding applications.

Natural stone cladding panels typically weigh in the range of 40–50 kg per square metre depending on thickness and stone type. For new builds, this adds cost from the ground up. For retrofit and refurbishment projects, it can make the use of real stone structurally impossible without expensive remedial work to the host structure.

A powder coated aluminium panel system delivering the appearance of stone typically weighs in the range of 5–8 kg per square metre - a reduction of up to 90%. On a commercial facade of even modest scale, that difference means a significantly reduced structural specification and a lower overall project cost.

Powder coating to replicate the appearance of stone

Historically, the objection to stone-effect finishes was straightforward: they didn't look convincing. But now, advances in textured powder coating technology mean that sandstone, limestone and granite effects can be replicated, and present a highly convincing alternative. Powdertech Stone finishes are available in a wide range of shades and textures and can be tailored to your requirements, allowing you to align with existing materials or meet a specific design brief.

The result of switching from real stone to Stone Finish on aluminium satisfies the design intent at a fraction of the structural and environmental cost.

Above: Powdertech 'Kilkenny Stone', Avebury Boulevard, Milton Keynes 

Read two of our Stone Finish projects, the Avebury Boulevard building in Milton Keynes, and Westfield Shopping Centre, White City, London.

The realism of Stone Finishes when used together with actual stone is displayed in this project at Justice Court, Cromer – one of our first Stone Finish applications.

Above: Powdertech 'Sandstone' on aluminium gutter, fascia and eves, and also on fascia panels above and below the large bay windows, Justice Court, Cromer. Natural sandstone elsewhere. 

Design possibilities opened up with powder coated metal

Architects and designers have far greater flexibility once metal is the material they are working with. They can produce long spans, slim profiles, and large façade elements. Installations where weight is a critical structural consideration would exclude stone, but not a Stone finish. Greater scope for design also arises from the reduced burden of installation issues,  transport costs, handling costs and important health and safety issues.

Embodied carbon is a specification criterion

A significant shift in recent years is the growing requirement to account for embodied carbon which includes the CO2 generated by quarrying, processing, and transporting materials. This has meant that developers pursuing BREEAM Excellent ratings or targeting net zero whole-life carbon now scrutinise Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) as a matter of course. Much of the aluminium in use today is recycled – some estimates state over 90%. Recycling aluminum uses only 5% of the energy required to produce primary aluminium from source. (ref: Council of Aluminium in Building).

Whole-life maintenance for natural stone versus powder coated metal

Natural stone is a porous material and requires protection from urban pollution, biological growth, freeze-thaw cycles and acid rain. It requires maintenance and cleaning in order to look presentable and to stay structurally sound.

Sealants need to be periodically reapplied to prevent water ingress and staining.

Biological growth such as algae, moss, and lichen requires treatment with special cleaning agents. If efflorescence occurs (the white salt deposits that migrate to the surface as water moves through stone) then further chemical intervention is needed.

These maintenance cycles mean scaffolding requirements, disruption to building occupants and cost.

Above: Mould and moss on natural stone facade. 

Powder coated aluminium and steel present an entirely different maintenance profile. The coating is non-porous, chemically resistant, and does not support biological growth in the way natural stone does. In most cases, routine maintenance requires nothing more than a periodic wash-down with water and a mild detergent. Read our Maintenance data sheet.  For building owners and facilities managers calculating whole-life costs, this simplicity has real financial value over a 25 or 30-year life span.

 

Moreover, Powdertech Stone finishes are highly durable with excellent colour stability. They are designed for long-term weather resistance, made using Qualicoat approved super durable powders, conform to BS-EN 12206-1 and applied with guarantees of longevity.

Powder coating on metal presents the way forward for architecture

For architects, contractors, and developers navigating the pressures of 2026 - tighter budgets, stricter carbon targets, and an evolving compliance landscape - the case for stone-effect powder coating on aluminium and steel is becoming increasingly relevant.

Find out more about Powdertech Stone Finish, and  Stone Finish Data Sheet 

Stone shades don’t always reproduce well on screen (and we’d never want a digital image to undersell the real thing),  so we encourage you to:

Order free swatches

or Send us a sample and let us coat it for you