• Welcome to The Building Code Forum

    Your premier resource for building code knowledge.

    This forum remains free to the public thanks to the generous support of our Sawhorse Members and Corporate Sponsors. Their contributions help keep this community thriving and accessible.

    Want enhanced access to expert discussions and exclusive features? Learn more about the benefits here.

    Ready to upgrade? Log in and upgrade now.

More glass issues

Inspector Gadget

REGISTERED
Joined
Mar 5, 2020
Messages
1,162
Location
New Brunswick
There's somethin' in the water in these here parts.

Found this last week: European safety glass in a door. Not permitted.

I've done some poking around, including calling a fellow inspector who is on the NRC committee for fenestration and doors, who in turn guided me to a top national expert.

The Euro standard 12600 is not cross-compatible with CGSB 12.1-M (the way ANSI Z97.1 is), so the client is left with removal, or an alternative solutions proposal.
 

Attachments

  • Euro standard.jpg
    Euro standard.jpg
    847.5 KB · Views: 8
Did the expert state that the European safety glass is not tempered glass? Or is the crux of the matter that the two standards have not been approved for reciprocity? And if the rub is that the two standards have not been approved for reciprocity, is that because nobody has attempted to gain the approvals? I wonder if USA legal glazing is approved for use in Europe?
 
Did the expert state that the European safety glass is not tempered glass? Or is the crux of the matter that the two standards have not been approved for reciprocity? And if the rub is that the two standards have not been approved for reciprocity, is that because nobody has attempted to gain the approvals? I wonder if USA legal glazing is approved for use in Europe?
The expert at fenetration Canada, basically said "Nope, no dice."

The requirement under Code for Canada is for glass in doors/guards to be tempered OR laminated safety glass.

1711030279491.png

ICE, I'd agree with you: delving into this, because I am a geek, there is actually a research paper done by some professor who raises concerns about the size of the particles that the European tests allow - shards 10cm long. That's a little transparent dagger, waiting for a victim.

I don't know if USA-legal glazing is allowed in Europe, but USA-legal safety glazing that meets ANSI z97.1 is allowed in Canada, because we aligned our standard with the ANSI standard, and our standard makes a specific claim of equivalence.

1711030479506.png

I would suggest that this might allow Canadian safety glass to be used south of the border.
 
2022 CA RESIDENTIAL CODE
Z97.1—2014:
Safety Glazing Materials Used in Buildings—Safety Performance Specifications and Methods of Test
 
Back
Top