Built Once. Built Right.
Practical care, real longevity, and smarter ownership.
A good stable isn’t just built; it’s looked after. Steel might be the strongest choice in modern equestrian design, but like any working asset, it rewards the owners who maintain it.
Think of your stable like a work vehicle: regular checks, small adjustments, and the occasional service keep it safe and performing for decades.
Fabricated framework wins because it’s non-combustible, termite-proof, and built for repair, not replacement. And with modular design, replacing a damaged bay or panel doesn’t mean pulling down an entire wall. Each piece can be unbolted, lifted, and rebuilt; that’s the kind of practical flexibility that makes sense in the real world.
Simple routines prevent expensive fixes later. Here’s a guide that keeps your stable, horses, and investment safe, organised by how often to do each task.
| Frequency | Tasks | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Daily (15, 30 mins) | Clean stalls. Check feed and water fixtures for sharp edges. Quick walk-around for gate latches and tie points. | Prevent corrosion and injury. |
| Weekly (1, 2 hrs) | Tighten hardware, lubricate hinges, clear ventilation mesh, and check feed storage for scavengers. | Stop vibration wear and rodent ingress. |
| Monthly (2, 4 hrs) | Power wash the exterior, inspect runoff and slab edges, and run a safety audit for hoof traps or sharp joints. | Keep the structure clean and sound. |
| Quarterly / Annually | Structural inspection, galvanic protection touch-ups, extinguisher servicing, and electrical GFI testing. | Maintain long-term safety compliance. |
| After Storms / Seasonal | Inspect bracing, roof fixings, and structural lines for movement. Check water ingress under purlins. | Catch damage early before it spreads. |
Pro Tip: 90% of stable failures start with loose bolts or poor airflow. Small checks save big rebuilds.
Clean steel is strong steel, and it’s safer for your horses. Cleaning your stable isn’t just about presentation, it’s preventative maintenance for both the building and the horses that depend on it. Keeping it clean helps you spot general wear and tear.
Every layer of dampness, dirt and debris or manure that builds up inside a stable doesn’t just smell bad; it quietly eats into coatings, welds, and base plates. A consistent cleaning routine protects both your structure and the animals living inside it.
Keep your steelwork clean. Horses breathe close to the ground, where odour levels, dust, and manure build up fast. Regular cleaning prevents pest infestations, removes unpleasant odours, and keeps your horses healthy in a safer, fresher environment. By keeping your stable clean, ventilated, and dry, you:

You don’t need an engineer to spot early issues, just a few simple tools. (see the Stable “First-Aid Tool Kit” below)
String-Line Method for Roof or Wall Deflection
Foundation Settlement Check
Lay a spirit level across stall thresholds or door frames.
If the bubble moves more than half a division, you’ve got slab movement.
Cost Guide (2026 AUD)
| Restoration Type | Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Crack Sealing | $250, $3,500 | Minor fissures |
| Slab Jacking | $3,000, $15,000 | Uneven dips |
| Underpinning | $12,000, $50,000 | Column shifting |
The anti-corrosion coating helps protects itself, but it still needs your help. Gaseous waste residue from urine and water from the roof both attack coatings.
Top & Bottom Threats:
Prevention:
A light touch-up now prevents a full resheet later.
These are the parts horses test first and hardest.
If you see puddles lasting over 24 hours after rain, fix the grading before the next storm. Pooling water can cause issues and shorten slab and structure life.
DIY Stable Drainage Fixes:
Good airflow isn’t just for the horse’s lungs; it protects your steel too.
High ammonia levels corrode base plates faster than coastal salt air.
What to look out for:
(Let’s say you have a stable that’s 4 m wide × 4 m long × 3 m high → That’s 48 cubic metres of air. If your ventilation gives you 4 ACH, that means: Every hour, 192 cubic metres of air (4 × 48) is replaced, all the air in the stable refreshed four times.
If your horses don’t cough, the walls stay dry, and there’s no smell, you’re likely within that 4 to 8 ACH sweet spot, even without instruments.
Steel can’t be chewed, but ply and feed still invite guests.
Use these habits to keep unwanted guests out and calm horses down.
What to Do:
Horses sense pests before you do. A rustle behind a wall can cause panic and damage.

Most shelter issues start small: a hairline crack, a faint dip, a slight squeak.
Catch them early, and they’ll cost minutes, not money.
Here’s how to tell what’s normal wear and what’s the start of a bigger problem.
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Early Warning | Severity | DIY Action | Call a Pro |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Door sticks or drags | Slab movement / hinge sag | The bottom edge scrapes the floor; the gap on one side of the door frame widens; the latch no longer lines up. | ⚠️ Low – Medium | Tighten bolts, shim hinge, level latch. | If the door frame shifts >5 mm or the track bends. |
| Rusting at base plates or corners | Animal waste splash, trapped bedding, poor water flow | Dull orange haze at welds, white powder (“zinc bloom”), flaking coating. | ⚠️ Medium | Clean, neutralise and recoat with a zinc-alloy coating system. | If pits are >1 mm deep or bubbles spread under paint. |
| Roof or beam deflection | Overload / foundation shift | Purlins start to bow slightly; the ceiling line “waves” when viewed side-on; doors stop closing smoothly. | ⚠️ High | Use the string-line test; clear debris, and tighten fixings. | If the dip exceeds 10 mm per 3 m span or roof joints separate. |
| Hairline paint cracks seam finish | Stress or vibration fatigue | Fine spiderweb cracks in the coating near corners or tie-up rails; shiny metal showing through. | ⚠️ Medium – High | Sand lightly, recoat, and monitor for widening. | If cracks widen, metal discolours, or join lines split. |
| Pooling water around columns | Blocked drainage / poor grading | Small puddles linger 24+ hrs after rain; moss or damp smell near posts. | ⚠️ Low | Clear debris, add gravel or regrade. | If slab cracks are >3 mm or water undermines the column base. |
| Condensation drips / corrosion lines on ceiling | Humidity trapped under the roof | Water beads on purlins at dawn; faint streaks form from screw lines. | ⚠️ Medium | Improve ventilation, add insulation, and open ridge vents. | If staining spreads or screws loosen. |
| Cracked formwork/ bent tie-up rail | Impact or fatigue | The paint line splits, a small gap is visible at the joint, and the rail flexes slightly under load. | ⚠️ Critical | None. Isolate the area and prevent horse use. | Professional service is required for bond fatigue. |
Severity Scale
⚠️ Low cosmetic/monitor during next check
⚠️ Medium, functional / rework and reinforcement within 1 to 2 weeks
⚠️ High or Critical, Structural / Isolated Area: Call an Engineer



Every stable should have a small maintenance kit with the right tools; think of it as first aid for your building.
Keep these on hand:
Five small tools. Countless saved repairs.
| Item | Purpose | How to Use It | Go to section |
|---|---|---|---|
| ColdGal Spray (Zinc-Rich Primer) | Prevents corrosion and restores protection to exposed sections | Wire-brush or sand the rusted area, wipe clean, spray a light coat of ColdGal, and let dry. | Rust prevention |
| Duragal Silver Topcoat | Apply as a topcoat after priming to seal and protect the structure. | Apply after ColdGal to restore the protective alloy layer and colour. | Rust |
| Tube of Exterior Sealant (Neutral-Cure Silicone or PU) | Seals joints, bolt holes, and edges to block water ingress | Run a small bead along base plates, ply edges, or around fixings. Smooth with a gloved finger. | Moisture Control |
| 80 – 120 Grit Sandpaper or Wire Brush | Removes loose residue or damaged coating before resealing. | Use light circular motion; don’t overwork coated or galvanised areas. | Rust Control |
| Graphite or Silicone Lubricant | Keeps moving parts (hinges, sliders, bolts) free of rust and friction. | Apply sparingly to hinges, track wheels, and door slides every 1 – 2 months. | Hardware |
| Builder’s String-Line & Tape Measure | Quick DIY tool for checking straightness or deflection. | Stretch between two points and measure the mid-span gap to detect roof sag or wall lean. | Diagnostics |
Keeping your stable in good working order isn’t just about structure , it’s about the simple tools that make regular maintenance easy. A few essentials can turn cleaning from a chore into a quick routine that keeps your horse happy and healthy all year round.
Your stable-cleaning kit should include:
Proactive maintenance saves time and prevents costly repairs. Keep your tools close, your routines consistent, and your stable in top condition, clean, dry, and ready for another day in the horse arena.
The protective alloy coating and welded corners deliver 25+ years of service life in Queensland’s inland and coastal climates, with up to 40% lower total ownership cost than timber or HDPE.
| Aspect | Wooden Stable | Steel Stable |
|---|---|---|
| Infestation Resistance | Needs annual treatment | Immune to termites & rodents |
| Fire Safety | Highly flammable | Non-combustible |
| Annual Upkeep | $500 – $2,000 | $100 – $300 |
| Lifespan | 20 – 40 years (high effort) | 50+ years |
DIY maintenance keeps you ahead, but serious movement, cracks, or bent members mean it’s time to get professional support.
Call if you see:
Early intervention keeps a $500 repair from becoming a $5,000 rebuild.
Steel stables thrive with small, consistent care. Clean it, check it, and let it breathe; that’s all it asks.
Need a hand or second opinion? Call Morgan if you need help 0405 538 413
When built right and maintained simply, your “Guerilla Steel” stable will outlast decades of horses, weather, and change.
Steel horse stables last decades when they’re treated like a working machine, kept clean, dry, and tight at the joints.
Regular stall cleaning reduces the build-up of ammonia, airflow stops corrosion, and simple tools like a string-line or tape measure let you catch wear before it spreads.
Duragal coatings self-heal small scratches, but only if moisture and surface degradation are managed early.
Think of this as preventative maintenance for structure and safety: light checks, light costs, long life.
All stable pricing, and estimates mentioned in this article are current at time of publishing, for accurate quote please get in touch or visit Base Model Compare page for instant estimate
© 2026 Guerilla Steel. ABN 25 713 977 300. All rights reserved.
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