That would depend on what a person would consider to be better regarding durability, improvements, comfort, looks, the ability to add to it and much more. Your question is vague.
While only 50,000 steel-framed homes were built in 1997, the steel industry is aiming for a 25 percent market share by 2003.
Most Japanese live in apartments in concrete or steel framed buildings though some older small apartment buildings have wood frames. Houses usually have wood frames and many are still built using wooden pegs to hold the timbers together.The outside of these houses are often covered with cement tiles,stucco or metal siding. The old style houses with wooden siding and sliding doors are becoming less common but are still in use. Rice
Steel desks have a different look to them than wooden desks. Wooden ones are more traditional, but steel desks look sharp and in fashion. They might also be more sturdy, but the price point is different.
wooden lacrosse sticks give you a lot more whip but they break easier then metal lacrosse sticks metal is way better
The Steel plow could break up soil without the soil sticking to it, the steel plow was better than the wooden plow because the wooden plow could not break up rich soil without breaking
A wooden door is wood. and a sleel door is steel
They are called Timbales.
Wooden Steel Comedy - 2006 was released on: USA: 1 June 2012
Depends as much on the design as the materials. In general a steel frame is springier while an aluminium frame is stiffer. A steel frame may be slightly easier to repair and an aluminium frame slightly lighter
B. A. Gray has written: 'Steel framed multi-storey buildings' -- subject(s): Building, Iron and steel, Estimates, Iron and steel Building, Tall buildings 'Steel framed multi-storey buildings, the economics of construction in the UK' -- subject(s): Building, Iron and steel, Estimates, Iron and steel Building, Tall buildings
steel
yes a steel structure is better than a wooden structure because steel is sturdier than wood.answ2. Both have their advantages.Wood is cheap, plentiful (yet) and needs no specialist tools or methods.The thermal properties of wood are good.Steel is strong, but corrosion is a serious challenge. But not overwhelming.But even today the long-term corrosion resistance; offered in light frame buildings; may need improvement.