Tips For Choosing the Right Glass For Your Home
Tips For Choosing the Right Glass For Your Home
Glass can perform many different roles, from making a home more comfortable and attractive to ensuring security and privacy – it’s simply a case of knowing what to ask for.
What are Your Requirements?
Consider the room’s function and ask the right questions: Will your priority be maintaining the temperature throughout the year? Is there a high level of external noise or will the area pose cleaning problems? It may be that the glass is in a position where you want natural light or to limit vision from one space to another? Careful consideration of your glass options in the first instance can add real benefits in the long-term.
Conservatory Glass
Conservatories can be cold in the winter and over-heat in the summer so when selecting glass, it’s vital to consider how much sun will enter the room. If building on a wall that collects a lot of sun, choose a solar control glass which helps reduce the amount of solar heat gain. Also ensure that you have plenty of ventilation, particularly in the roof, to let heat out and prevent it becoming a greenhouse.
It is important to keep your conservatory warm without wasting energy. Installing Insulating Glass Units (IGUs) with a low emissivity coating and argon gas filling can help extend the number of months that your space can be comfortably used; by reflecting heat back into the room, maximising the use of available free heat and therefore generally improving comfort.
Door Glass
Glazing in internal and external doors can provide added light and a sense of space without compromising on safety, security or privacy.
For external doors, think about the degree the doors need to act as a barrier between the outdoors and the inside of the home. If the door may be vulnerable, ask about burglar resistant doors and grades of laminated glass specially developed to resist entry for longer. For internal glass doors there are impact resistant grades of glass with and without levels of privacy.
Glass in and around doors within and below 1500mm from the floor needs to be impact resistant. There are two common types of safety glass available:
• Toughened glass – Up to five times stronger than ordinary glass and shatters into small, safe granular pieces when broken, perfect if you have lively young children.• Laminated glass – Two pieces of glass bonded with a clear plastic interlayer, so if it cracks or gets broken, the glass stays in position, reducing the risk of injury. Also ideal for crime prevention.
You can also get fire resistant glass for doors and screens in areas where fire protection is needed such as upper floors and doors to garages.
Roof Conversions / Skylight Glass
Converting roof and loft space is a popular way to transform a home, but placing windows into hard-to-reach areas such as a loft can make cleaning challenging.
Glass is available with self-cleaning properties that can vastly reduce the time spent …