Another of the ever popular contemporary home designs set up in the N.W. Hills above the Pittock Mansion.
We never really set out to capture a market share of the glass replacement business.
But it might be said that the glass replacement market captured a substantial segment of our business.
Understandably, when the glass in a person’s windows or doors fogs-up or is broken, you might look under doors and windows for the repair.
So over two decades ago, we began getting calls to replace glass. Today, it roughly accounts for a third of our repair business.
All brands, all makes, all models. We replace glass in steel windows, old and new wood and wood-clad windows, vinyl and…
…fiberglass and aluminum windows. Residential & commercial. If interested, you might take a gander in the commercial window repair category of this portfolio to see some of the commercial…
…glass we replace. You might find it reassuring to realize you’re dealing with a company whose services many property managers trust and employ.
A modest, but very well appointed single-story home in Gresham.
Designed by someone with a keen appreciation for Bay-Window Structures. Count them. Living Room.
Dining Room.
Kitchen.
Breakfast Nook. Most folks would likely agree that the Bay Window structures tend to add a bit of flair and added dimension to an otherwise sterile set of window openings.
Technician Brandon Todd goes about the task of deglazing some of the failed glass on the living-room bay window by removing some of the vinyl snap-bead.
Bruce Hickenlooper employs the use of a pizza cutter tool for cutting the glazing-tape on the interior side.
And the failed (foggy) original glass is removed from the aluminum frame.
After cleaning the aluminum frame surfaces of all residual traces of the original glazing tape, Brandon applies new glazing tape.
99.9999% of the time, we haul-off and dispose of the old glass. The only time we would not haul it off is if our client preferred to keep it for some reason.
Another house built by Designer/Builder “Robert Rummer” in the Hyland Hills area of Beaverton. If interested in seeing more of the modern architecture of Rummer homes, go to; http://photos.rummernetwork.com/
Time to upgrade the glass from single-pane to insulated, double-pane glass.
We were actually hired by another contractor who was replacing most of the glass units…
…but who wisely sought out our expertise for the three largest floor to ceiling trapezoid shaped units.
This one was almost 12 foot tall at the peak and just over 6 feet wide.
The new insulated glass units are delivered on-site. You can probably tell by the green color showing from this angle that the new glass includes the latest 366-Low-E coating. You may enlarge the photo to see it better by clicking on it.
Technicians Tim Afonin & David Castro prepare one of the smaller openings (this one is only 9′ tall) for the new glass.
Modifying these direct-glazed openings for the thicker glass necessitates the careful removal of the original wood stops and ripping them down on a table-saw.
The original single-pane glass was 1/4″ plate glass, the new units are 1″ overall. So we’re cutting 3/4″ off of the original wood stops.
The blue masking tape is applied to both the stops and the glass to minimize the mess related to the wet-glaze process, and to leave a tight and professionally finished glazing-bead on the exterior.
If there is one obvious common denominator among most modern, contemporary types of architecture now days…it might very well be the use of light and glass.
If you enlarge this photo, you might be able to make out the Glen Jackson bridge showing through near the tops of the trees, which should also indicate the Southerly direction which this bank of windows is facing from the Washington side of the Columbia river.
This bank of direct-glazed picture windows are manufactured by Eagle brand windows (http://www.eaglewindow.com/). Rigid extruded aluminum on the exterior and removable Birdseye Maple sticking on the interior.
The failed glass is a 42″ X 9’10” net unit, so we brought plenty of manpower.
Ladders on the exterior enable us to access the seams between the glass and the aluminum frame…to cut the silicone glazing bead, while the interior wood sticking is removed.
Tim & Kyle get ready to move the glass into position. Note the glass-cups near the floor.
You might be able to appreciate how much we employ the use of “choreography” when handling glass such as this.
We can’t have someone trying to pull something one direction while someone else is pushing it another direction, if you know what we mean.
And yes…when we actually lifted the glass into position…the camera was set down so we had 4 technicians helping with that critical step.
Jared puts the finishing touches on the project with his pneumatic finish nailer.
In the book of Ecclesiastes, it says that “light is sweet.” (Chapter. 11 Vs. 7-NIV)
So if you are among the many who seem naturally attracted to such architecture as that which…
…employs the use of natural light, we know that your tastes are associated with a well-documented and long-standing phenomenon.
Consider how dark this walkway would be if covered by a conventional roof.
Obviously, these photos are not sequenced chronologically, but were configured as they are for the sake of presentation.
This is actually how we found the assembly when we first showed up…with some of the glass missing.
The wind had apparently gotten hold of one of the panes and wrestled it loose from it’s from its moorings, such as this piece(above)is about to.
Our client told us that they found it laying out in the driveway…shattered.
So we were called upon to replace the glass and to improve those moorings a bit. And we were all too happy to comply.
You might be surprised how many different glazing techniques folks come up with to install glass into various structures. For better, or for worse, there doesn’t seem to be much standardization in the industry.