title: Glazier
slug: glazier
aliases:
  - glass installer
  - glazing contractor
  - curtain wall installer
category: Skilled Trades
tags:
  - glass
  - glazing
  - curtain-wall
  - safety-glazing
  - construction
difficulty: intermediate
summary: >-
  How an expert glazier thinks about a brittle material in a moving building,
  picking glass by how it must break and protecting the seal and the bond that
  no one can see.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: ironworker
    type: collaboration
    note: erects the curtain wall mullions the glass sets into
  - slug: carpenter
    type: adjacent
    note: sets the window and door frames in residential work
  - slug: roofer
    type: related
    note: shares skylight and building-envelope water-shedding detail
  - slug: structural-engineer
    type: collaboration
    note: sets the wind and guard loads the glass and its bond must carry
  - slug: architect
    type: collaboration
    note: specifies the glass type and facade detail the glazier executes
specializations:
  - storefront/commercial glazier
  - curtain wall glazier
  - residential window and mirror glazier
  - auto glass technician
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: GANA/NGA Glazing Manual
    kind: book
  - title: International Building Code (safety glazing provisions)
    kind: standard
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      Glass is the only building material expected to be transparent,
      structural,

      weatherproof, and safe to stand next to when it breaks — all at once. A
      glazier

      exists to put glass into a building so it keeps weather out, lets light
      and view

      in, carries wind and sometimes its own dead load, and fails safely when it

      fails. The craft lives at the seam between a brittle, intolerant material
      and a

      moving, breathing structure: glass does not bend, buildings do, and the
      glazier's

      entire job is to mediate that conflict with the right glass, the right
      framing,

      and the right movement joints so the glass never gets loaded in a way it
      can't

      survive.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Set the correct glass type into a properly designed and weatherproofed
      frame so

      it carries its loads, blocks water and air, allows for thermal and
      building

      movement, and breaks safely — and so the seal that keeps an insulated unit

      working outlives the warranty.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      Measuring openings and ordering glass cut and tempered to size; selecting
      the

      glass type for the code, the load, and the human risk; setting glass into

      storefront, curtain wall, window, and door framing with the correct
      setting

      blocks, gaskets, and edge clearances; sealing with the right glazing
      compound,

      tape, or structural silicone; installing mirrors, shower enclosures, and
      glass

      railings; and handling and cutting glass safely. Beneath the visible glass
      is

      constant attention to bite, edge clearance, glazing pocket, and movement,
      and a

      respect for the fact that a sheet of glass is a guillotine until it's
      safely set.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **Glass doesn't bend; the frame and the joints absorb the movement.**
      The
        glazier's job is to keep load off the glass except the load it's designed for.
        Pinch glass in a rigid frame with no clearance and thermal stress or building
        movement will crack it.
      - **The right glass for the risk.** Tempered where breakage endangers
      people
        (doors, low glazing, wet areas), laminated where it must stay in the opening or
        hold a load, annealed only where neither applies. Code (the human impact areas
        of the IBC and the safety glazing standards) is the floor.
      - **The insulated unit lives or dies by its seal.** A failed edge seal
      lets the
        cavity gas escape and moisture in; the unit fogs and is finished. Edge
        clearance, setting blocks, and a drained, vented pocket protect that seal.
      - **Setting blocks at the quarter points.** Glass rests on two blocks at
      roughly
        the quarter points of the sill, never hard on the frame and never pinched at
        the corners.
      - **Weatherproofing is layered: gasket, sealant, and a way out for
      water.**
        Pockets are designed to drain; a sealed-tight pocket with no weep traps water
        against the seal and rots the system.
      - **Handle as if it will break, because it will.** Edge protection,
      suction cups,
        proper lifting, and never standing where a dropped lite lands.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **Glass as a brittle membrane in compression-friendly, tension-hostile
      terms.**
        Glass is strong in compression and weak in tension; it breaks from edge flaws
        and surface scratches under tensile stress. Every break starts at a flaw at the
        edge or surface, which is why edge quality and clean cuts matter so much.
      - **Tempered vs. laminated vs. annealed — three different failure modes.**
        Annealed breaks into shards; tempered shatters into small cubes (safe but gone,
        and cannot be cut or drilled after tempering); laminated cracks but the
        interlayer holds the pieces in place. Pick by what the failure must do.
      - **The glazing pocket as a small drained cavity.** The U-channel holding
      the
        glass edge is a system: setting blocks below, edge clearance around, face
        clearance (bite) front and back, and weeps to drain. Think of it as a tiny roof
        gutter, not a slot.
      - **Structural silicone transfers load through adhesion.** In a structural
        silicone glazed (SSG) curtain wall, the silicone bead actually holds the glass
        to the frame against wind load. Bead size is engineered to the wind pressure,
        the cure is everything, and contamination kills the bond.
      - **Thermal stress from differential heating.** When the center of a lite
      heats
        in sun while the shaded edge stays cool, the differential expansion can crack
        annealed glass. Tinted and shaded glass is a thermal-stress candidate; heat-
        strengthening solves it.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - Glass fails in tension from a flaw, so edge condition and clean cuts
      decide
        strength more than thickness alone.
      - An insulated glass unit is only as durable as its perimeter seal, and
      that seal
        fails fastest when sitting in water.
      - Once tempered, glass cannot be cut, drilled, or edge-worked — every
      dimension
        must be right before it's heat-treated.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - Is this a safety-glazing location — does code require tempered or
      laminated
        here?
      - What are the wind and dead loads, and is the glass thickness and type
      rated for
        them?
      - Is there enough edge and face clearance for thermal and building
      movement?

      - Where does water in this pocket go — is it drained and weeped?

      - Is this lite going to see differential heating that could crack annealed
      glass?

      - For structural silicone: is the substrate clean, the bead sized to the
      load,
        and the cure protected?
      - Is the unit's seal intact, and are the setting blocks at the quarter
      points on
        the right durometer?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Tempered vs. laminated vs. heat-strengthened.** Tempered for impact
      safety
        and strength where fall-through isn't the concern; laminated where the glass
        must remain in the opening (overhead, railings, hurricane, security); heat-
        strengthened to beat thermal stress without full tempering's distortion.
      - **Wet glaze vs. dry glaze vs. structural silicone.** Wet (sealant)
      glazing for
        weather-tight field-set storefront; dry (gasket) glazing for speed and clean
        replacement; structural silicone where the design carries glass load through
        the bond and the look is frameless.
      - **Field measure vs. shop drawings.** Order off shop drawings for new
      framed
        systems on a schedule; field-measure existing openings (and never assume they're
        square or plumb) before ordering custom or tempered glass that can't be trimmed.
      - **Repair vs. replace the IGU.** A fogged insulated unit gets replaced,
      not
        resealed — the seal is gone; a scratched-but-sound lite may be polished or left.
        A cracked tempered lite is always replaced.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Measure and verify.** Field-measure the opening (check square, plumb,
      and
         daylight opening), confirm the safety-glazing requirement, and account for
         edge clearance.
      2. **Specify and order.** Choose glass type, thickness, coating, and unit
         makeup; order cut and tempered exactly to size — there's no trimming after.
      3. **Prep the opening.** Confirm the frame is true, the pocket is clean
      and
         drained, and the substrate for any structural silicone is clean and primed.
      4. **Set the blocks and the glass.** Place setting blocks at the quarter
      points,
         set the lite with suction cups, center it for even edge clearance.
      5. **Glaze and seal.** Install gaskets or tooling sealant, tool the bead,
      mask
         for clean lines, and weep the pocket so it drains.
      6. **Cure and protect.** Let structural silicone cure undisturbed; protect
      glass
         from weld spatter and traffic that would scratch or crack it.
      7. **Clean and inspect.** Check the seal, the drainage, the bite, and the
      glass
         for scratches; verify the safety logo is present where required.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Tempered strength vs. distortion and finality.** Tempered is strong
      and safe
        but optically distorted ("roller wave") and impossible to alter after — a
        mismeasure means a new lite.
      - **Frameless aesthetics vs. structural risk.** Structural silicone and
      frameless
        railings look clean but put the entire wind or guard load on the bond or a
        single laminated lite; the engineering and the cure have no margin.
      - **Sealing tight vs. draining.** A fully sealed pocket keeps wind-driven
      rain
        out but traps any water that gets in against the seal; a properly weeped pocket
        leaks a little by design and lasts.
      - **Cost vs. performance glass.** Low-E and argon-filled units cost more
      and pay
        back in energy; clear single glazing is cheap and a thermal hole. The owner's
        budget and climate decide.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - Order tempered to the exact size — you cannot cut it, ever.

      - Setting blocks go at the quarter points, sized to the glass weight and
      the
        pocket.
      - If glass is within 24 inches of a door or 18 inches of the floor, assume
      it
        needs to be safety glass.
      - A fogged double-pane means a dead seal; replace the unit, don't reseal
      it.

      - Score once, clean and firm, and break with even pressure — a re-scored
      line
        breaks ragged.
      - Tinted or shaded glass is a thermal-stress risk; consider
      heat-strengthening.

      - Never set glass hard against metal; clearance and a cushion, always.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Edge-seal failure (fogging)** — water sitting in an undrained pocket,
      or a
        unit set without clearance, kills the seal.
      - **Thermal stress crack** — annealed tinted glass with a hot center and
      cold
        shaded edge cracks in a clean curve from the edge.
      - **Pinch/compression crack** — glass set with no clearance cracks when
      the frame
        or building moves.
      - **Structural silicone bond failure** — contamination, wrong primer, or
        disturbed cure lets a lite peel off a curtain wall under wind.
      - **Wrong glass in a safety location** — annealed where tempered or
      laminated was
        required, a code violation and a human hazard.
      - **Spontaneous tempered breakage** — nickel-sulfide inclusions cause rare
        unprovoked shattering; heat-soak testing mitigates it on critical glazing.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **Ordering off a frame you assumed was square** instead of
      field-measuring.

      - **Sealing the pocket airtight** with no weeps, drowning the IGU seal.

      - **Resealing a fogged unit** to save money instead of replacing it.

      - **Setting glass directly on the metal sill** with no setting blocks.

      - **Rushing a structural silicone cure** or skipping the clean-and-prime
      step.

      - **Substituting annealed for tempered** because the tempered lite came in
      wrong
        and the schedule is tight.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **Tempered glass** — heat-treated to ~4x the strength of annealed,
      breaks into
        small safe cubes, cannot be cut after.
      - **Laminated glass** — two lites bonded over a plastic interlayer
      (PVB/SGP) that
        holds fragments in place when broken.
      - **Annealed glass** — ordinary float glass, breaks into sharp shards.

      - **IGU (insulated glass unit)** — two or more lites sealed around a
      spacer with a
        gas-filled, desiccated cavity.
      - **Low-E** — a microscopically thin coating that reflects infrared,
      cutting heat
        loss and gain.
      - **Bite / face clearance** — how much of the glass edge the frame
      overlaps and
        the gap front and back.
      - **Setting blocks** — load-bearing cushions that support the glass at the
        quarter points.
      - **Structural silicone glazing (SSG)** — glass held to the frame by an
        engineered silicone bond against wind load.
      - **Weep** — a drainage opening that lets water out of the glazing pocket.

      - **Lite** — a single pane of glass.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      Glass cutters (oil-fed wheel) and running pliers for scoring and breaking;

      suction cups and glass-handling lifts for setting; setting-block kit and
      glazing

      shims; caulk guns and tooling spatulas for wet glazing; gasket rollers;
      tape

      measure, level, and square for verifying openings; a wet belt sander or
      seamer

      for edge work on annealed glass; mirror mastic and clips; and edge
      protection,

      cut-resistant gloves, and a respirator for cutting and old
      glazing-compound

      removal. For curtain wall, the torque tools and the structural-silicone
      gun with

      backer rod and bond-breaker tape.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      Glaziers work inside the building envelope sequence, after the framing and

      storefront extrusions are set and weatherproofed, coordinating with the
      metal

      framers who set the curtain wall mullions, the caulkers who own the
      perimeter

      joint, and the general contractor on hoisting and protection. On
      commercial

      curtain wall they follow the architect's and façade engineer's stamped
      details,

      and the structural-silicone work is often inspected and the bead
      pull-tested. The

      friction lives at the perimeter joint — where the glazier's pocket meets
      the

      building's flashing — and at protection, because a beautiful glass wall is
      one

      careless welder's spatter away from a field of scratched, scrapped lites.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      The glazier's most important decisions — whether the glass in a stairwell
      is

      tempered, whether a railing lite is laminated, whether a structural bead
      is sized

      and cured right — are invisible behind a transparent, finished surface,
      and they

      are decisions about whether glass kills someone when it breaks. The
      duties: never

      substitute a weaker glass to make a schedule; put safety glazing wherever
      code

      and common sense put a human at risk, not just where the drawing happens
      to

      specify; refuse to reseal a dead unit and call it fixed; and protect the
      cure and

      the bond on structural work that holds glass overhead against the wind.
      The

      public stands next to and beneath this work trusting it not to fail on
      them.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **A fogged picture window the customer wants "resealed."** A homeowner
      asks to

      have the foggy double-pane front window resealed cheaply. The expert
      explains the

      fog is moisture inside a dead edge seal — the desiccant is saturated and
      the gas

      is gone; there is no resealing it, only replacing the insulated unit.
      Field-

      measuring, they also notice the original was set with no weeps and the
      sill held

      water, which is why the seal died early. The fix is a new IGU set on
      proper

      blocks in a drained pocket, so the replacement doesn't fail the same way
      in five

      years.


      **Choosing glass for a frameless glass guardrail.** An architect wants a

      frameless glass balcony rail. The glazier knows a guard must resist a code

      guardrail load and must not let anyone fall through if a panel breaks. A
      single

      tempered lite would satisfy strength but, if it shatters, leaves an open
      edge — a

      fall hazard. The correct choice is laminated (often heat-strengthened or
      tempered

      laminated with a stiff SGP interlayer), so a broken panel cracks but holds
      its

      shape and stays in the base shoe. Specifying plain tempered here would
      meet the

      load and fail the human-safety intent.


      **A storefront lite cracking in clean curves every summer.** A retail
      tenant

      reports the same tinted storefront lite cracking each summer in a smooth
      arc from

      the edge. The glazier recognizes a classic thermal-stress break: the tint
      absorbs

      heat, the center expands, the edge sits cool in the shaded frame, and
      annealed

      glass can't take the differential. The fix isn't a thicker annealed lite —
      it's

      heat-strengthened (or tempered) tinted glass, which tolerates the thermal
      gradient.

      Replacing like-for-like in annealed would just schedule the next summer's
      crack.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      The glazier works alongside the ironworker and metal framers who erect the

      curtain wall mullions the glass sets into. The carpenter sets the wood
      window and

      door frames in residential work. The roofer shares the skylight and the
      building

      envelope's water-shedding logic. The architect specifies the glass type
      and the

      façade detail the glazier must execute, and the structural engineer sets
      the wind

      loads the glass and its bond are sized to.
  - heading: References
    markdown: >-
      - *Glazing Manual* — National Glass Association (NGA/GANA)

      - *International Building Code* — safety glazing (hazardous locations)
      provisions

      - ASTM C1036/C1048 (glass) and C1184 (structural silicone) standards

      - Manufacturer guidelines for structural silicone glazing and IGU
      fabrication
