Aiken
Metal Buildings
from an industry leader serving the commercial, agricultural, equestrian, residential, aviation, retail, and church S. Carolina steel building customer.
Welcome to Buck Steel
AikenFor almost 20 years, Buck Steel has supplied both commercial and private metal building customers with the highest quality pre-engineered Aiken metal buildings. With 1,000’s of completed projects in our portfolio, we can put our experience to work on your project.
Our website is packed with both informative information about steel buildings, as well as hundreds of pictures of some of our customer’s completed projects.
Please watch our Welcome Video , which provides a brief overview of Buck Steel and the services we provide our customers.
Why Choose Buck Steel
Aiken Experience
We have nearly two decades of Aiken steel building experience from simple backyard shops to the complex commercial projects. Our vast experience helps to ensure your project completes on time and on budget.
Integrity
We are not high pressure telemarketing metal building brokers; we are steel building industry professionals dedicated to serving our customers and contributing toward the success of their projects.
Price
We understand that price is important. Our knowledge of steel building and thousands of completed metal building projects allows us to contribute design and value engineering advice to help you save money.
Aiken Metal Buildings
Aiken Steel Building Customers
South Carolina is like home away from home for Buck Steel and we are grateful to have had the opportunity to work with so many private individuals, small businesses, and corporate customers in Aiken.
Whether your steel building project is a 2,400 sq. ft. metal garage or a 24,000 sq. ft. steel warehouse, you’ll be in good company when you choose Buck Steel as your metal building supplier!
The History of Aiken
Named after the president of the South Carolina Railroad (William Aiken), Aiken was founded in 1835. Thirty six years later, Aiken County was formed by taking parts of the surrounding counties and Aiken became the county seat.
Aiken developed around the area at the end of the rail line that ran from Charleston to the Hamburg. Aiken was a planned city with its roads and parkways designed by engineers Alfred Dexter & C.O. Pascalis.
In it’s early days, it was a place of respite for the wealthy who sought to escape the more populated cities and northerners who sought a place of refuge from the winter weather. Regular visitors to Aiken included: The Astor’s, The Vanderbilt’s, The Whitney’s, The Harriman’s, and Senator James Eustis.
The greater Aiken area played an important role in the Cold War when construction of the “Savannah River Site” began in 1951. A massive construction project employing nearly 40,000 workers, the facility was designed to produce tritium and plutonium that would later be used for the U.S. nuclear arsenal to address the growing Russian nuclear threat.