Glass - Safety
The following short guide is necessarily worded in a general way and cannot cover
every circumstance. It is intended only as a guide for manufacturers, suppliers
and installers of new and replacement glass and glazing products for domestic use.
The content is relevant to UK - domestic situations only.
Where glass and glazing products are supplied for domestic use (such as conservatories,
garages, double glazing, porches) they must comply with the 'General Safety Requirement'
of the General Product Safety Regulations 1994 (GPSR). This requires consumer products
to be reasonably safe and this may be achieved by conforming with British Standard
BS 6262: Part 4: 1994 (as detailed below) with reference to the Approved Document
N of the Building Regulations 1991.
WHAT GLAZING MUST BE SAFE?
The updated British Standard "BS 6262: Part 4: 1994 Code of Practice for Glazing
for Buildings", introduced new requirements that glazing fitted in 'critical locations'
in domestic buildings must be safe. This may be achieved for example by fitting
glass which breaks safely; small panes of ordinary glass; thicker ordinary glass;
by protecting the glass with a permanent robust screen; or using plastics glazing
sheet. Further details are given below. The GPSR and the standard apply to all domestic
glazing installations whether new build, replacement or refurbishment.
WHAT IS A CRITICAL LOCATION?
Certain internal and external areas are considered 'critical locations' in terms
of the safety of vertical glazing, as they are at risk from accidental human impact.
The critical locations defined by the standard are similar to the Approved Document
N of the Building Regulations 1991. The 'critical locations' in any internal or
external domestic area are: Doors Any glazing or part of that glazing in a door,
which is between the finished floor level and a height of 1500mm above the floor
level, is in a 'critical location'. Side Panels to Doors Any glazing or part of
that glazing, which is within 300mm of either side of a door edge and which is between
the finished floor level and a height of 1500mm above the floor level, is in a 'critical
location'. Windows, partitions, and walls Any glazing or part of that glazing, which
is between the finished floor level and a height of 800mm above the floor level,
is in a 'critical location'.
EXAMPLES OF LOCATIONS
Diagram 1 below gives examples of glazing in windows, partitions, walls, doors and
side panels. 'Critical locations' are shaded grey. Any glazing within a shaded area
must comply with BS 6206. In Diagram 1, glazing unit No. 10 falls wholly within
a 'critical location' and so the glazing must comply with BS 6206. Where only part
of a glazing unit falls within a 'critical location' the whole of that unit must
comply with BS 6206. In Diagram 1 this applies to units Nos. 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 11
and 12. In Diagram 1 only glazing units Nos. 1, 4 and 8 fall wholly outside the
'critical location' and need not comply with BS 6206.
WHAT GLAZING IS 'SAFE'
IN 'CRITICAL LOCATIONS'?
Glass and Safety Plastics
Safety glass, which complies with 'BS 6206: 1981 (1994)' may be fitted in 'critical
locations'. This standard requires the glass to pass stringent tests involving impacts
from a "punch bag" containing lead shot. Providing the glass does not break or breaks
safely it is categorised as Class A, B, or C with A being the highest grade of safety
glass.
Different types of glass can be classified as safety glass:
Toughened Glass (also called tempered) categorised as Class A - This looks
like ordinary glass but receives a special heat treatment process to toughen it.
It is much stronger than ordinary glass and on impact disintegrates into small granular
pieces, which are not sharp, reducing the risk of injury.
Laminated Glass available in Class A, B or C - Consists of two or more sheets
of ordinary glass which are attached together by a plastic interlayer. The plastic
layer provides a barrier and on impact any broken shards of glass will remain attached
to the plastic reducing the risk of injury.
Wired Glass (also called Pyroshield safety clear/textured) categorised as Class C
- This glass has a network/mesh of wires embedded in it. Certain types of wired
glass can satisfy the impact requirements for safety glass while giving a level
of fire resistance.
Plastics Glazing Sheet - Certain types of transparent plastic sheet can satisfy
the impact requirements for safety glass. Please Note: Glass in doors and side panels
may only be glazed in Class C materials where the smaller dimension is a maximum
of 900mm. Where this dimension is greater than 900mm glazing categorised as Class
A or B is required.
WHAT SHOULD I LOOK FOR
ON SAFETY GLAZING?
'British Standard 6206: 1981 (1994)' requires that each piece of safety glazing
used within 'critical locations' should be marked with the all of the following:
The British Standard number 'BS 6206'. Identification of the type of glass used
i.e. 'L' for laminated, 'P' for plastics, 'T' for tempered (toughened), 'W' for
wired or 'SFB' for safety film backed.
The category of safety glass used i.e. 'Class A', 'Class B', or 'Class C' (based
on its performance under impact tests). A suffix 'o' denotes front impact test only
e.g. mirrored wardrobe doors.
An identifiable name, trademark or other identification mark of the manufacturer.
If any of the above markings are lost by cutting, then the company which carries
out the cutting must replace markings a) to c) and add their own identifiable name
or trade mark.
|