Do they actually prevent a person from going over the edge of a balcony or interior residential "bridge" application if someone was knocked or fell into one?
That’s amazing stuff. Have always preferred laminated over tempered. Being unbreakable is better than breakable regardless of shard size. Wonder about how it bent on impact, wouldn’t someone fall with the bend? Isn’t code 200 lbs. of lateral force – no bend?
Years ago when this was first the rage someone did a detail like that on a condo building in NYC. Glass was mounted just like that, with holes and metal brackets. No laminated glass at the time, just tempered. The metal fabricator (my friend) tried to talk them into a different detail - specifically eliminating outboard mounting and holes in the glass. When the architect refused he declined the job.
During construction a worker dropped a wrench from the roof. It hit one of the panels, shattering it and causing a cascade failure that went down 12 floors.
I don't know about everybody else but if for some reason I fell into even a laminated glass balustrade and it bent like in the video I would probably go over the edge. They are a beautiful design element providing visual consistency but for safety reasons I would have to use something like this:
With all of us being in the business and seeing, watching things get built – whenever I’m in a high-rise hotel with a balcony – I don’t lean on anything.
frameless glass balustrades
Do they actually prevent a person from going over the edge of a balcony or interior residential "bridge" application if someone was knocked or fell into one?
DuPont video
That’s amazing stuff. Have always preferred laminated over tempered. Being unbreakable is better than breakable regardless of shard size. Wonder about how it bent on impact, wouldn’t someone fall with the bend? Isn’t code 200 lbs. of lateral force – no bend?
Years ago when this was first the rage someone did a detail like that on a condo building in NYC. Glass was mounted just like that, with holes and metal brackets. No laminated glass at the time, just tempered. The metal fabricator (my friend) tried to talk them into a different detail - specifically eliminating outboard mounting and holes in the glass. When the architect refused he declined the job.
During construction a worker dropped a wrench from the roof. It hit one of the panels, shattering it and causing a cascade failure that went down 12 floors.
I don't know about everybody else but if for some reason I fell into even a laminated glass balustrade and it bent like in the video I would probably go over the edge. They are a beautiful design element providing visual consistency but for safety reasons I would have to use something like this:
Miles,
I just looked at some images of the Grove Synagogue, very nice.
With all of us being in the business and seeing, watching things get built – whenever I’m in a high-rise hotel with a balcony – I don’t lean on anything.
i believe IBC requires a connecting metal top rail over glass panels to help retain bodies in case of a glass panel failure, sim to the img abv
looks precarious, and makes people nervous.
Plus...do you really want a railing that you have to clean all the time with Windex?
Looks cool. Over here in California most cities require a top rail on the glass panel. Most people removed them after inspection.
It is good if there is a view from inside the house. It is hard to keep them clean.
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