Chicken-Wire Glass
Old House Journal|January/February 2017

New Yorkers Gretchen and Ray Master embraced the use of salvaged wire glass in transoms and door panels at their early 20th-century loft apartment.

Brian D. Coleman
Chicken-Wire Glass

First manufactured in the late 19th century as safety glass, wire glass doesn’t shatter easily, is fire-resistant, and maintains its integrity when broken. The design is simple, just wire mesh (often farmyard chicken wire) embedded during manufacture in a sheet of plate glass. Insurance companies, city and state governments, and builders were quick to recognize its value. By the turn of the 20th century, wire glass was required in buildings from schools to firehouses and city halls, and used in skylights, windows, and transoms.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January/February 2017-Ausgabe von Old House Journal.

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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January/February 2017-Ausgabe von Old House Journal.

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