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Boris Zimin
Boris Zimin

Where To Buy Chicken Wire Glass


Our chicken wire glass includes aqua pebbled chicken wire glass, corrugated chicken wire glass, antique pinwheel patterned glass, clear chicken wire glass, hammered chicken wire glass, square chicken wire glass, frosted chicken wire glass, ribbed chicken wire glass and wormy chicken wire glass.




where to buy chicken wire glass


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Use our online search filter to find the antique chicken wire glass you need by size or color, or contact us directly with your style or size requirements and we will check stock availability across all of our warehouses.


Need a safety glass for your interior security? Install a chicken wire glass. It gives you safety at a cheap cost. Bear Glass is one of the best fabricator and installer of chicken wire glass in USA and also in Canada. For any of your query, call us or you can mail us at sales@bearglass.com. For a free consultation, contact us today. Read more...


Lamination is one way to fabricate this vintage glass. Many glass fabricators are equipped to laminate mesh wire to clear float glass or different kinds of pattern glass. Some patterned glass options that accentuate the mesh wire include floralite, flemish, reed, and winterlake glass. The combination of the mesh wire and the pattern glass gives the unit an antique, old-world feel. Glass laminating involves two layers of glass with liquid resin and the desired interlayers. The final product will be a thick safety glass that is perfect for skylights or window panels. When a product is laminated, the glass will stay in place instead of shattering when compromised.


Chicken wire glass was invented as a safety measure during the Industrial Revolution. Factory windows were susceptible to shattering because of the heat and vibrations produced by thrumming of machines. The panes were often used overhead since the mesh prevented shards of glass from clattering down on those below.


Bendheim manufactures Tempered Safety Glass: Standard annealed glass can be heat treated in a sophisticated furnace to produce tempered safety glass. The glass is first cut to size and transferred to the furnace where it is heated to a precise softening point, then quickly air cooled. The process creates a glass approximately four times stronger than standard annealed glass. When broken, tempered safety glass shatters into many small fragments thereby greatly reducing the likelihood of major injury. It is used when safety, strength and thermal resistance are important considerations.


Our ribbed chicken wire glass has been reclaimed from pre-war industrial buildings and factories that have been marked for demolition or renovation. We hand select our clear chicken wire glass to bring you the finest quality pieces, and refurbish it carefully to provide unique glass of superior quality.


As the largest architectural salvage company in the US, Olde Good Glass is proud to offer the widest range of unique ribbed chicken wire glass for your vintage building needs. Please contact us directly with any queries about stock availability.


Ribbed chicken wire glass is a hot design material in a number of innovative and unique ways currently, and it is as popular for its aesthetics as for its practical uses.The glass is popular in bathrooms, for shower doors and windows, because it obscures and offers some privacy while adding character, and allowing light to penetrate, to the room.


Ribbed chicken wire glass also has practical benefits in the home, and is popular for display windows and shelves because it intercepts the sunrays that cause discoloration to fabrics and books, thereby protecting anything near the windows.


Just like any other chicken wire glass, ribbed chicken glass is fire resistant. It stops the fire from spreading because even if the glass is broken during fire, the fragments stay connected by the wire.


Our wormy chicken wire glass has been reclaimed from pre-war industrial buildings and factories that have been marked for demolition or renovation. We hand select our wormy chicken wire glass to bring you the finest quality pieces, and refurbish it carefully to provide unique glass of superior quality. Our current stock has a slight purple tint.


Wormy chicken wire glass adds a decorative feature to windows, enclosures and door panels. Its intricate pattern adds depth, while obscuring the glass to add a touch of privacy. The textured vintage glass also diffuses light to create a soft look, either against natural light or the different effects given off by light bulbs.


Our clients have utilized wormy chicken wire glass in residential, commercial and industrial buildings. It has been incorporated as a design feature and to create functional spaces within different environments.


Wormy chicken wire glass is a prime example of how form and function intercept. The internal framing of the chicken wire adds resilience to the glass, as well as an industrial edge. The ornate texture of the glass balances this out, and adds elegance to the overall effect.


Chicken wire glass is also popular for use in modern homes because of its safety features. It is favored as a fire safe material, because the chicken wire will hold the glass together in the event of a fire and prevent it from spreading. The chicken wire and thick glass are also less likely to shatter in the event that the glass breaks.


Since the school shootings in Newtown, Connecticut, there has been a lot of discussion about how to make schools safer and more secure. Glass in the doors and first-floor windows is one of the items in question, because this glass can have an effect on building access. Traditional wired glass has been installed in some of these locations, in a misplaced attempt at providing additional security. In fact, I saw a photo of an exterior door opening at Sandy Hook School (not the door which was used by the gunman), and the pair of doors and adjacent sidelites were all glazed with traditional wired glass.


I agree that GPW (Georgian Polished Wire) glass is unsafe. However, when I was in door & hardware sales, this type of glass was code compliant for any U/L fire rated door or lite. I had been requested on several projects to use a clear glass, as owners found the wire glass unsightly. The only option at the time was ceramic fire rated glass and the cost difference was astronomical, compare $12 to $150 psf (from memory).


The wired glass cartel, comprised of foreign manufacturers, was able to effectively prevent the expansion of other safety glazing because they manufacture this stuff on the cheap. They used the U.S. as a dumping ground because the UK would not let them sell the cheap stuff in their country; the UK required a film to be inserted in the wired glass to provide the impact resistance that everyone expects from safety glazing. The other wired glass manufacturers were located in Japan and had the same objective: making money without regard to human safety.


Unfortunately, we still have a lot of education to do. I work for a federal agency now, and we provide loans and grants to businesses, individuals and communities. On a tour of a recent hospital expansion that we provided funding for, I noticed wired glass in the waiting room and in some other locations. You can imagine my horror to see that glass in a waiting room of all places where families with children are present. I immediately took the project manager aside and asked if this was newer, impact-resistant wired glass. His answer was that it was some old glass they had laying around in the shop. I gave him 48 hours to have the glass removed, sent him a copy of the Oregon State Building Codes on the use of wired glass and instructed him to contact the architect and provide him with the same.


Today, I encourage all building owners to conduct a survey of existing wired glass installations, and start a replacement program to address the safety risks. Building owners may choose to replace wired glass or engage a certified safety film installer to apply a labeled safety film in the field that has both been fire and impact tested to meet code requirements. With a thorough fire and safety glazing assessment and selection of appropriate replacement products, the cost is affordable, and well worth the expense to protect building occupants from serious injury.


Wired glass has been the cause of many injuries and though it has been banned in the United States, there are still countless injuries due to wired glass in Canada. This needs to be stopped. For more information on alternatives to wired glass see


Hollander glass printed wire collection captures precise color and texture of real wire glass designs, without all the bulky fabrication. Printing the wire design eliminates the need for bulky and expensive wire interlayers. This glass is easy to reproduce and can be fabricated for safety. All of our featured wire designs can be scaled and printed on additional textured glass options to meet your project needs.


When specifying safety wired glass products, it is important to recognize that simply putting safety film on wired glass without prior testing and independent certification is not only inadequate, but a highly dangerous practice that violates code requirements. Not all films work; some can actually contribute to the spread of fire. The same concerns apply when putting safety film on existing wired glass in the field. It must be done under the guidelines of a certified field filming program to ensure that the new fire-rated safety wired glass meets the fire and impact safety requirements of the code.


Traditional wired glass (non-safety) is not banned. It can still be used in fire windows in non-hazardous locations, but is limited to 25 percent of the wall area. This size limitation applies to all fire protective glazing.


Confusion in the marketplace continues to surround wired glass due in part to its code history. In 1977, the CPSC developed 16 CFR 1201 to protect people from injuries due to accidental impact with glazing in certain locations. This meant that glazing used in hazardous locations such as doors and sidelites had to meet a minimum Category I impact test that stipulated 150 foot-pounds of impact and limited glazing area to 9 square feet (1,296 square inches). A more stringent Category II impact test that stipulated 400 foot-pounds of impact also was established for glazing areas that exceeded that size, such as patio doors. 041b061a72


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