Steel rebar is ribbed reinforcing steel used to strengthen concrete by providing tensile resistance so slabs, walls, and columns don’t crack or fail. Standard grades specify minimum yield strength, and coatings improve corrosion resistance. For contractors in 370 New Enterprise Way and Woodbridge, Dass Rebar supplies, fabricates, and delivers compliant reinforcement across Ontario.
By Dass Rebar • Last updated: 2026-05-16
Above-Fold: Why this guide matters + What’s inside
This guide shows how to choose, detail, fabricate, and install steel rebar correctly—so you avoid schedule slips, change orders, and rework. You’ll learn practical steps for Ontario projects, when to use epoxy-coated and GFRP bars, and how Dass Rebar coordinates estimating-to-delivery for predictable pours.
Here’s the thing: rebar errors don’t look big on paper, but they cause crane idle time, missed pours, and warranty risk. We wrote this for busy GC and concrete teams that need clear, field-tested answers fast.
- What steel rebar is and how it actually works inside concrete
- When to specify black, epoxy-coated, welded wire mesh, or GFRP
- Ontario-grade sizes (10M, 15M, 20M) and simple conversions
- Detailing and shop drawing checkpoints that prevent rework
- Step-by-step: estimating → fabrication → delivery → assembly
- Local logistics tips for GTA schedules and winter pours
At a glance
- Audience: Ontario GCs, concrete contractors, developers, construction managers
- Standards: Common Ontario grades (400W, 500W), with epoxy-coated options and GFRP
- Services: Estimating, detailing, project management, fabrication, delivery, and on-site assembly—under one roof
Contents
Summary
Steel rebar refers to deformed steel bars and meshes embedded in concrete to carry tension. Specifying the right grade, bar size, and coating reduces cracking, improves service life, and keeps schedules intact. Dass Rebar unifies takeoffs, shop drawings, fabrication, delivery, and assembly to reduce change orders across Ontario builds.
Concrete is strong in compression but weak in tension. Rebar balances that equation. In our experience, most project delays trace back to a handful of avoidable mix-ups: wrong bar sizes, missing splice lengths, unclear lap directions, late deliveries, and last-minute epoxy substitutions.
If you only skim one section, read Best Practices below. It outlines checkpoints that prevent 80%+ of the field issues our coordinators see in submittals and pre-pour huddles.
What is steel rebar?
Steel rebar is a ribbed steel reinforcement placed in concrete to resist tension and control cracking. Bars are specified by grade (minimum yield strength), size, and coating. Matching design intent, exposure class, and detailing requirements determines durability and buildability on site.
Think of concrete and steel as a team: concrete resists compression; steel rebar carries tension and limits crack widths. Ontario projects commonly use metric grades such as 400W and 500W with yield strengths of about 400–500 MPa. Epoxy-coated rebar improves corrosion resistance where de-icing salts or marine exposure are present.
For a deeper primer on concrete reinforcement planning, see our concrete rebar guide, which expands on exposure classes and placement tolerances used in submittals across the GTA.
Why steel rebar matters
Choosing the right steel rebar keeps structures durable, serviceable, and code-compliant. Correct grades, coatings, bar spacing, and laps reduce shrinkage cracks, mitigate corrosion, and extend service life—directly lowering maintenance risk for owners and warranty exposure for builders.
Here’s why it matters to your schedule and warranty risk:
- Durability window: Proper cover, bar spacing, and coatings can extend service life by decades in chloride-rich environments.
- Serviceability: Controlled crack widths keep facades and slabs tight; uncontrolled cracking drives repair scope later.
- Constructability: Clear shop drawings and reasonable bar bends reduce field fit-up issues that stall pours.
- Compliance: MTO-approved materials and documentation align with public infrastructure submittals and inspections.
We’ve found that pairing early estimating with in-house detailing eliminates most change orders before they hit site coordination. Our team routes every takeoff through a detailing review so congestion, lap splice conflicts, and elevation transitions are resolved well before fabrication.
How steel rebar works
Steel rebar bonds to concrete so both materials act together under load. Concrete takes compression; steel carries tension. Deformations on the bar improve mechanical interlock, while cover depth and spacing control cracking, corrosion, and long-term performance.
In reinforced sections, the neutral axis shifts so the tension zone relies on steel. Bars are placed where tensile stresses are highest—bottom of simply supported slabs, top over supports, around openings, and at re-entrant corners.
- Bond: Deformations develop bond stress so steel strain transfers to concrete without slip.
- Cover: Adequate cover protects steel from chlorides and carbonation; chairs and spacers preserve that cover during placement.
- Spacing: Proper spacing ensures concrete can flow and consolidate, reducing honeycombing and voids.
Need a concise workflow? Our rebar fabrication guide outlines how we translate bar lists into bundled, tagged deliveries that match your pour sequence.
Types, sizes, and approaches
Use black steel for general interiors, epoxy-coated steel for chloride exposure, welded wire mesh for temperature/shrinkage, and GFRP where non-corrosive, non-conductive reinforcement is required. Match 10M, 15M, and 20M sizes to design loads, spacing, and lap lengths for buildable, code-aligned detailing.
Ontario teams most often work with these options:
Common reinforcement options
- Black steel rebar: The workhorse for interior slabs and many structural elements where corrosion risk is low.
- Epoxy-coated rebar: Green-coated bar that resists corrosion; widely used in parking structures, podiums, and decks exposed to de-icing salts. See our epoxy rebar guide for selection tips.
- Glass Fibre Reinforcing Bars (GFRP/GFRB): Non-corrosive and non-conductive; useful near sensitive equipment, in highly aggressive exposure, or to reduce maintenance.
- Welded Wire Mesh (WWM): Standard sheets (e.g., 6″×6″ at 6/6, 9/9, 10/10) to control shrinkage and temperature movement in slabs and walls.

Metric sizes you’ll actually use
- 10M: Nominal diameter about 11.3 mm. Often used for stirrups, ties, and light slabs. Comparable to roughly a #4 bar in cross-sectional area.
- 15M: Nominal diameter about 16.0 mm. Common for typical slab reinforcement and grade beams—stronger than 10M without heavy congestion.
- 20M: Nominal diameter about 19.5 mm. Used where higher tensile demand or longer spans require fewer, larger bars.
Quick comparison table
| Type | Typical Use | Corrosion Resistance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Black steel | General interior, low chloride exposure | Standard | Most economical; verify cover and drainage |
| Epoxy-coated | Parking decks, podium slabs, exposed slabs | High | Handle carefully to protect coating at bends/laps |
| GFRP | Highly aggressive or non-conductive applications | Excellent (non-corrosive) | Different design properties; follow manufacturer guidance |
| Welded wire mesh | Temperature/shrinkage control in slabs/walls | N/A (steel) | Ensure laps are tied and sheets are supported to maintain cover |
Unsure which path fits your exposure class? Our steel reinforcement supply overview walks through common Ontario scenarios and stock availability.
Best practices
Lock down exposure class, cover, bar size, lap lengths, and splice locations in detailing. Sequence fabrication by pour breaks, tag bundles to drawings, and align deliveries to crane windows. Pre-pour checks on chairs, clearances, and laps eliminate most rework and delays.
Detailing checkpoints
- Confirm exposure and cover: Align slab and wall cover with environmental exposure to reduce corrosion risk.
- Resolve congestion up front: Clash stirrups, longitudinal bars, embeds, and penetrations in shop drawings before fabrication.
- Define laps clearly: Show directions, staggering, and lengths; avoid lap conflicts at openings and corners.
- Match bends to site reality: Keep bend radii and bar shapes practical for field placement and vibration.
Estimating and takeoffs
- One source of truth: Tie takeoffs to a controlled revision set; annotate assumptions and alternates.
- Bundle by pour sequence: Speed staging and reduce double-handling—especially on tight GTA sites.
- Early epoxy decisions: Flag epoxy-coated needs during tender to avoid late substitutions.
See our detailing best practices and estimating guide for checklists that align with typical Ontario submittals.
Fabrication, delivery, and assembly
- Fabrication QA: Verify bar marks, lengths, and bends against approved shop drawings.
- Tagged bundles: Label by area and sequence; include bar lists per bundle.
- Delivery windows: Align drop-offs to crane times and street access rules; use a dedicated fleet for predictable ETAs.
- Assembly readiness: Stage chairs, spacers, and tie wire; confirm clearances before placing concrete.
When crews follow this sequence, pours close on time. That’s why our coordinators route every job through project management—so estimating, detailing, fabrication, and trucking share the same plan.
Tools and resources
Use coordinated takeoff templates, shop-drawing checklists, and pour-sequencing tools to reduce change orders. Pair internal workflows with supplier resources for reinforcement types, finishes, and compatibility so field crews receive exactly what the drawings specify.
- Rebar product overview: See the broader JDASS network’s rebar products overview for context on availability and finishes.
- Steel framing context: For structure-wide planning, this steel framing overview gives a helpful macro view when coordinating with structural steel scopes.
- Framing systems guide: Explore coordination touchpoints noted in the framing systems guide when your project blends concrete podiums with steel superstructures.
Internally, our teams rely on standardized bar list formats and pour maps. If you’d like the templates we use, ask your Dass Rebar coordinator—our goal is fewer emails and faster pours.
Case studies and examples
Coordinated estimating, detailing, and delivery remove friction from pours. On recent Ontario projects, aligning epoxy selections, bar sizes, and bundle tagging to pour maps helped contractors hit their crane windows and keep finishing trades on schedule.
Example 1: The Hawthorne Residences (Toronto)
- Challenge: Podium slabs exposed to winter salts required corrosion protection without congesting reinforcement.
- Approach: Switched exposed zones to epoxy-coated bars, standardized laps, and bundled per pour break.
- Result: Deliveries landed within selected crane windows; finishing trades stayed on their original dates.
Example 2: Hickory Terraces (Waterloo)
- Challenge: Tight site lines limited staging; congested beam-column joints risked fit-up issues.
- Approach: Detailing resolved bar layering and bends; bundles tagged to elevation and gridline.
- Result: Assemblies installed without rework; no pour was missed due to reinforcement readiness.
Example 3: The Grand at Universal City (Pickering)
- Challenge: Mixed use podium demanded different reinforcement types across exposure classes.
- Approach: Combined welded wire mesh for temperature control with epoxy-coated bars at exposed edges.
- Result: Reduced crack-related punch items post-cure; owner accepted slabs without remedial scope.
Want to see how we plan these flows? Our rebar supply guide shows how estimating, shop drawings, fabrication, and delivery connect to the same timeline.
Local considerations for 370 New Enterprise Way
- Plan GTA traffic windows with your pour map. Our dedicated trucking fleet sequences drops to crane access so reinforcement is on deck when crews are ready.
- For winter placements, coordinate epoxy-coated rebar and cover early. Cold weather concreting plus de-icing exposure raises the stakes on protection and curing.
- On municipal and MTO-style scopes, align submittals and inspection points with your inspector’s expectations. Our MTO-approved supply status streamlines this.
Frequently Asked Questions
Here are direct answers to the rebar questions Ontario builders ask most: sizes and conversions, when to choose epoxy-coated or GFRP, how to sequence deliveries, and which checkpoints stop rework before it starts.
What does 10M rebar mean?
10M is a metric bar size with a nominal diameter of about 11.3 mm. It’s commonly used for stirrups, ties, and lighter slab reinforcement. Designers often pair 10M with tighter spacing to control crack widths while keeping congestion manageable.
When should I use epoxy-coated rebar?
Use epoxy-coated bars where chloride exposure is expected—parking structures, podium edges, exposed slabs, or areas treated with de-icing salts. The coating improves corrosion resistance. Handle bars carefully to avoid damaging the coating, especially at laps and bends.
What’s the difference between rebar and welded wire mesh?
Rebar refers to individual deformed bars designed to carry structural tension. Welded wire mesh is a prefabricated grid used primarily for temperature and shrinkage control. Many slabs use both: bars for structural reinforcement and mesh to limit surface cracking.
How do I prevent rebar-related pour delays?
Freeze drawings early, resolve congestion in detailing, and bundle bars by pour sequence. Tag everything clearly, confirm delivery windows with your crane plan, and run a pre-pour check on cover, laps, chairs, and clearances. This sequence eliminates most site-day surprises.
Is GFRP a replacement for all steel rebar?
No. GFRP is non-corrosive and useful in aggressive or non-conductive applications, but it has different mechanical properties than steel. Designers specify it intentionally for certain conditions. Always follow the design engineer’s requirements and manufacturer guidance.
Conclusion
Great concrete performance starts with the right reinforcement choices and a tight plan. When estimating, detailing, fabrication, delivery, and assembly run on one coordinated track, pours land on time and owners get durable structures with fewer callbacks.
- Key takeaways:
- Match reinforcement type to exposure and service life expectations.
- Size and spacing influence crack control and constructability.
- Resolve congestion and laps in shop drawings—not on the deck.
- Bundle and tag by pour sequence to align with crane windows.
- Use epoxy or GFRP strategically where chloride exposure is high.
Next steps: Share your latest drawings and pour calendar with our team. We’ll align estimating, detailing, fabrication, and trucking so your reinforcement lands when crews need it.
Soft CTA: Want a coordination review? Reach out through our site and ask for a submittal-ready bar list package tailored to your schedule.

Related articles
If you’re building out reinforcement scopes now, these deep dives will help: our 10M rebar guide clarifies ordering; the rebar supply overview connects procurement to pours; and the fabrication guide shows how tagged bundles reduce handling on tight GTA sites.
