Cat ladders for Singapore buildings — aluminium, SS304 or galvanised mild steel?

Published 2025-05-06 · 10 min read

Cat Ladders for Singapore Buildings: Choosing Between Aluminium, SS304 and Galvanised Mild Steel

Companion to the EN10025 Steel Grades Comparison workbook — for designers and contractors specifying fixed access ladders to BS EN ISO 14122-4, SS 570 and SCDF requirements.


Why this blog matters

A "cat ladder" is the industry term for a fixed vertical ladder — the kind found on roof access points, water tanks, plant decks, mezzanines, telecom shelters, and SCDF-mandated rescue hatches in storey shelters. It looks simple: two stiles, a row of rungs, a few wall brackets. But it is a life-safety component: a person at the top of a 6 m run can be carrying 100 kg of body + tools, and the ladder must stay rigid even after a slip-fall arrest event.

Three materials dominate the market in Singapore:

  1. Aluminium (typically alloy 6061-T6 or 6063-T6) — light, corrosion-resistant, premium price.
  2. Stainless Steel SS304 — strong, corrosion-resistant, medium-heavy weight, premium price.
  3. Galvanised Mild Steel — usually a S235 / S275 / S355 structural section, hot-dip galvanised to BS EN ISO 1461. Lowest material cost, heaviest, requires re-coating long-term.

This blog walks through the structural strength differences that drive the choice, with reference to BS EN ISO 14122-4 (the EN ladder design code), SS 570 (Singapore PPE/fall-protection standard), and SCDF storey-shelter cat-ladder requirements.


1. The design loads every cat ladder must meet

The starting point for any selection is what the ladder must carry. Per BS EN ISO 14122-4:2016 (Safety of machinery — Permanent means of access — Part 4: Fixed ladders):

Load caseMagnitudeWhere applied
Rung load F1 (one person)1.5 kNMid-rung, distributed over 100 mm
Stile load F2 (one person)1.5 kNEach stile, 2 m apart
Fall-arrester anchor load≥ 6 kNTop anchor, when device activates
Each anchorage point to wall≥ 3 kN per stile (two-stile ladder)Each of four anchor points
Single-stile ladder≥ 6 kNThrough the single stile

For comparison, OSHA 29 CFR 1910.23 requires every fixed ladder to support ≥ 250 lb (≈ 1.13 kN) on any two consecutive rungs simultaneously (OSHA fixed ladder requirements).

In Singapore, SCDF Technical Requirements for Storey Shelters 2021, Clause 2.11.2 mandates that "the cat-ladder shall be made of either stainless steel or aluminium or equivalent", and "the mounting connections of cat-ladder to the SS wall shall be designed to withstand shock loads of at least 12.5 g in all directions" (SCDF). For an 80 kg cat ladder, 12.5 g translates to a 10 kN shock load in each direction — a very onerous requirement that filters out flimsy materials immediately.

> Takeaway: SCDF actively excludes mild steel for shelter cat ladders. For non-shelter applications (factory roof access, water tanks, plant rooms), all three materials are permitted, but EN 14122-4 is the load benchmark the designer must satisfy regardless of material.


2. Material strength compared

Drawing on data from the Cross-Material Strength and Strength-to-Weight sheets in the workbook, plus ASTM/EN handbook values:

PropertyGalv MS (S275)Galv MS (S355)SS304Aluminium 6063-T6Aluminium 6061-T6
Yield strength fy275 MPa355 MPa210 MPa214 MPa276 MPa
Ultimate tensile strength410–560 MPa470–630 MPa515–720 MPa241 MPa310 MPa
Density ρ7,850 kg/m³7,850 kg/m³8,000 kg/m³2,700 kg/m³2,700 kg/m³
Modulus of elasticity E210 GPa210 GPa200 GPa69 GPa69 GPa
Strength-to-weight (fy/ρ)35 kN·m/kg45 kN·m/kg26 kN·m/kg79 kN·m/kg102 kN·m/kg
EN partial factor γM01.001.001.10 (EN 1993-1-4)1.10 (EN 1999)1.10 (EN 1999)
Elongation at break22–26%22%45%12%12%

Sources: workbook Cross-Material Strength sheet, Kloeckner 6061 vs 6063, AMD Supply.

What this means for ladder design

(a) Stiffness — not strength — usually governs cat ladder design. A cat ladder is a long slender column subject to load away from the wall. Deflection and lateral stability govern far more than yield. Aluminium has only one-third the stiffness of steel (E = 69 GPa vs 210 GPa). So although 6061-T6 has yield strength comparable to S275 mild steel, an aluminium stile must be deeper or thicker to match the same deflection limit. EN ISO 14122-4 implicitly recognises this: most aluminium ladders use thicker box-section stiles (e.g. 50×50×4 mm hollow) instead of the typical 50×10 mm flat stile used for steel.

(b) Stainless SS304 has lower yield, higher elongation, and a 10% strength penalty. SS304 yields at 210 MPa, slightly below even S235 mild steel. It also carries a higher partial factor (γM0 = 1.10 per EN 1993-1-4 vs 1.00 for carbon steel per EN 1993-1-1) — meaning the designer must reduce its capacity by another ~10% in calculations. To compensate, SS304 ladders are usually fabricated from slightly thicker stiles than mild-steel equivalents. The pay-off is 45% elongation (more than double mild steel's 22–26%), which gives SS304 superb energy absorption during a fall-arrest event.

(c) Galvanised mild steel has the best raw strength — when uncorroded. S275 galvanised is the workhorse material for industrial cat ladders. Yield is high, stiffness is high, and the section can be slim. The catch is corrosion: once the galvanising is breached the underlying steel rusts rapidly, and section loss erodes capacity. For an outdoor ladder in Singapore (humid, rain, salt-laden coastal air), a typical 80 µm hot-dip galvanising lasts 15–25 years in C3 environments, but only 5–10 years in C5-M coastal/industrial zones (BS EN ISO 14713-1).


3. Worked example — a 4 m roof access cat ladder

Let's apply EN ISO 14122-4 loads to a typical 4 m rise, 400 mm rung width, 4-bracket fixing ladder, and see what stile section each material needs.

Design action on each stile (worst case, person at mid-height):

  • F2 = 1.5 kN per stile, applied 2 m apart → bending moment in stile ≈ 0.75 kN·m
  • Plus self-weight bending and a 1.0 kN service torque from a slip event (typical assumption)
  • Total design moment MEd ≈ 1.0 kN·m

Required plastic section modulus Wpl,Rd:

\[ W_{pl,Rd} \geq \frac{M_{Ed} \cdot \gamma_{M0}}{f_y} \]

MaterialfyγM0Required WplTypical stile section
Galv MS S275275 MPa1.003.6 cm³40 × 8 mm flat (Wpl = 3.2 cm³) — slightly under, use 50×8 (Wpl = 5.0 cm³)
SS304210 MPa1.105.2 cm³50 × 10 mm flat (Wpl = 6.25 cm³) ✓
Al 6061-T6276 MPa1.104.0 cm³50 × 50 × 4 mm SHS (Wpl = 5.4 cm³) ✓ — but check deflection
Al 6063-T6214 MPa1.105.1 cm³60 × 60 × 4 mm SHS (Wpl = 7.4 cm³) ✓

Now the interesting part — deflection under F2 = 1.5 kN at mid-stile, simply supported between brackets at 1.5 m centres:

\[ \delta = \frac{F L^3}{48 E I} \]

For the same stile sections above:

MaterialI (cm⁴)E (GPa)δ at 1.5 kN over L = 1.5 m
MS S275, 50×8 flat8.32100.5 mm
SS304, 50×10 flat10.42000.6 mm
Al 6061-T6, 50×50×4 SHS22.0690.7 mm

> The aluminium SHS is the bulkiest section but achieves comparable deflection because of its larger second moment of area I — the engineer trades section depth for the lower modulus.

This is exactly why aluminium cat ladders look chunkier than steel ones for the same span — and why a "spindly" aluminium ladder is a red flag for under-design.


4. Suitability summary — when to pick each material

ApplicationBest choiceWhy
SCDF storey-shelter rescue hatchSS304 or Aluminium (mandated)Mild steel not permitted; 12.5 g shock requirement
Indoor plant room, dry environmentGalv MSLowest material cost, longest life when dry, easy to weld and modify
Coastal / marine roof accessSS316 preferred, SS304 acceptableGalv life < 10 years; aluminium pits in chloride splash
Petrochemical / industrial C5 zoneSS316Galv corrodes; SS304 risks pitting from chlorides + chemicals
Lightweight rooftop ladder, low loadAluminium 6061-T6Easy to install single-handed; no painting; rust-free
Heavy industrial cat ladder, frequent trafficGalv MS S355Highest stiffness, lowest cost, easy to inspect and repair
Food / pharma plantSS304/SS316Hygienic, no flaking paint, easy to clean

5. Compliance snapshot — what to specify on the drawing

Whichever material you pick, the drawing should call up:

  • Geometry: Rung spacing 225–300 mm constant (EN 14122-4 §5.2.2.2). Clear width ≥ 150 mm and ≤ 250 mm between stile and slip-protection (§5.2.2.3). Tread surface ≥ 20 mm flat (§5.2.2.4).
  • Clearance: ≥ 650 mm in front of rungs, ≥ 200 mm behind (EN 14122-4 §4.4). 7-inch (≈ 178 mm) minimum behind for OSHA-aligned design.
  • Fall protection (above 3 m climbing height per EN 14122-4 §4.4.2.2, or 24 ft per OSHA 1910.28): cage or ladder safety system or personal fall arrest. For new ladders > 24 ft (7.3 m), most modern standards now require a rail-based safety system rather than a cage (OSHA 2017 update).
  • Single-flight max length: 6 m without a rest platform; rest platform required at ≥ 12 m with fall arrester, ≥ 24 m without (KRAUSE EN 14122-4 guide).
  • Material grade + finish:

- Galv MS: "S275JR to BS EN 10025-2, hot-dip galvanised to BS EN ISO 1461, minimum coating 85 µm" - SS304: "1.4301 to BS EN 10088-2, polished to 240-grit, all welds passivated" - Aluminium: "6061-T6 or 6063-T6 to BS EN 573-3, anodised 25 µm minimum"

  • Anchorage design: each anchor ≥ 3 kN (or ≥ 6 kN single-stile); shock 12.5 g if SCDF storey-shelter.
  • Welding: SS304 use 308L/308LSi filler, avoid sensitisation 425–850 °C (workbook Weldability sheet). MS: E7018 or equivalent. Aluminium: 4043 or 5356 filler depending on alloy.

6. Cost reality (Singapore market, indicative 2024–2026)

For a typical 4 m, 2-stile cat ladder with 4 wall brackets, no cage, fabricated and installed:

MaterialIndicative costService life (Singapore tropical)
Galv MS S275S$ 350–50015–25 years inland; 5–10 years coastal
SS304S$ 1,200–1,80025+ years inland; 15–20 years coastal
SS316S$ 1,600–2,40030+ years coastal; 50+ inland
Aluminium 6061-T6S$ 1,000–1,50030+ years (no rust, anodising lasts)

When you divide cost by service life, SS304 and aluminium often beat galvanised mild steel for outdoor coastal applications. For dry indoor plant access, galv MS remains the most cost-effective.


7. Bottom line

  • For sheer strength-per-millimetre, S355 galvanised mild steel still wins — but durability is the limiting factor in Singapore's climate.
  • SS304 is the best all-round structural choice, especially for life-safety installations where the ladder must remain trustworthy for decades.
  • Aluminium is the lightest and most corrosion-immune option, but the lower stiffness (E = 69 GPa) forces designers to use thicker stiles — a "skinny" aluminium ladder is almost certainly under-designed.
  • SCDF mandates SS or aluminium for storey-shelter cat ladders, with a 12.5 g shock-load anchorage check that is far more onerous than the EN 14122-4 baseline.
  • Whatever material you pick, specify to BS EN ISO 14122-4 for geometry and loads, and call up the matching coating standard.

The next blog in this series covers how the ladder is anchored to the wall — concrete vs AAC vs cement block — and the engineering details that prevent the most common failure mode: anchor pull-out.


References cited inline. Workbook source: EN10025_Steel_Grades_Comparison.xlsx (Cross-Material Strength, Strength-to-Weight, Design Standards, Weldability sheets).

Download the PDF version: Blog_CatLadder_Aluminium_vs_SS304_vs_GalvMS.pdf

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