Developments in UV-bonding technology are supporting glass processors in driving innovation in the built environment, delivering great architecture and higher margins, according to Bohle.
One such example is the 90ΒΊ seamless Infinity Corner IGU from The Glass Man.
In the early 1940s, American architect Frank Lloyd Wright said: βThe outside of any building may now come inside and the inside go outside, each seems as part of the other. Continuity, plasticity, and all the new simplicity they imply have at last come home.β
It was the quote from Frank Lloyd Wright that got Alex Simpson, managing director and owner of The Glass Man, thinking about how as an industry we handle corners in window design, especially when those windows are looking out onto panoramic views.
βPillars and supports interrupt and ruin them,β he said. βThe concept was simple: develop a glazing unit that turns a corner to maximize the view outside. It was doing it that was the hard part.β
Having initially developed the concept more than a decade earlier, The Glass Man manufactured its first 90ΒΊ seamless Infinity Corner IGU in 2009.
βIt wasnβt delivered overnight,β Alex said. βIn part because I was developing the unit alongside running a business and in part because it took a lot of investment to get the process right.β
The patented Infinity IGU is suitable for use with timber, aluminium, composites and PVCU frames, in either double or triple-glazed, argon-filled options. These are manufactured from 8mm toughened external glass and 6mm Pilkington K toughened internally.
βThese units are invariably going out to somewhere sitting on top of a sea cliff or half way up a mountain so you need to factor in wind loadings,β Alex said.
Creating a single IGU unit that in effect seamlessly turns the corner of building, presented a unique set of challenges. βWe worked very closely with Bohle to identify the right UV bonding solution,β Alex said. βThere are other suppliers out there and theyβll all supply you with a product but what you get from Bohle is incredible technical expertise.
βWe made a number of trips across to Haan in Germany to work with their technical team to identify the right bonding solution for what we were trying to achieve.
βIt sounds simple but in manufacturing a 90ΒΊ unit, youβre applying at least five disciplines. You have to understand glazing, edge-working, polishing, toughening and bonding, before you even get to sealing and filling the unit.
βManufacture at 90ΒΊ creates a lot of different challenges, not least how you turn spacer bar on a 90ΒΊ angle.β
Manually manufactured, units also have to be specially packaged before shipment to minimize risk of damage in transit.
This hasnβt, however, stopped the Infinity Window from βtravellingβ. For a window manufactured a stoneβs throw from the banks of the River Clyde, this has included shipments as far afield as Penzance and Sligo, and London to Estonia.
βItβs more expensive than a standard IGU but as a percentage of a larger high-end installation itβs negligible and in defining a room, or even the architectural style of a property, it delivers a huge number of benefits to the end-user,β Alex said.
βThe real opportunity here is for window companies. Itβs such a stunning architectural product, selling it as a fabricator or retail business delivers so many USPs and opportunities for high margin.
βThatβs what we have always tried to do: manufacture innovative high quality products that deliver high margin to us as a business and our customers.β