Archive for the ‘Glass work’ Category


Timber Clad staircase

Friday, February 4th, 2011

Even though our metalwork is hidden in this case we are proud to showcase this particular stairs. We manufactured the complete staircase from mildsteel plate to give extreme strength so as to avoid having any legs going to the floor.

After the joiner had clad the metalwork we installed the frameless glass panels and fitted special plates to allow the joiner clad outside the glass.

This is another fine example of design before it’s too late.
Well done lads, another brilliant job.
As we say here, CDS…….. making metalwork less ordinary.

Regards,
Martin.

Metal Staircase in the home.

Monday, January 17th, 2011

Here is a completed mildsteel staircase with timber treads and glass and stainless steel balustrades to the feature staircase and landing area.

The mildsteel centre spine adds enormous strength to the stairs and eliminates the need for stringers. The stainless steel handrails and balustrades are polished to 240 grit finish and all welds are polished or where possible hidden altogether.
On this particular project a simple curve was incorporated to the last few steps which makes a simple stairs look great.

Regards,
Martin.

Curved Glass……

Friday, January 7th, 2011

Frameless glass look good but when you add a curve into the equation it even looks better. Not easily achieved but when done properely the results are spectacular. Here we have a concrete curved staircase in a home and we have fitted curved glass panels to the stairs and landing using machined and polished stainless steel fixing brackets and we have also fitted a spiral stainless steel tubular handrail.

More finished projects coming soon.

Regards,
Martin.

Stainless Steel and glass staircase

Thursday, October 14th, 2010

As I indicated earlier, we are currently installing a feature staircase in a home. The stairs is manufactured from 304 grade satin polished to 240 grit finish stainless steel stringers complete with glass treads and balustrades. We have managed to install the stairs without the use of glass fixings, spider brackets, patch fittings etc. This project is bolt free. We are using a product called CT1 clear adhesive which has allowed us to bond the glass treads into polished stainless steel fabricated brackets. This is a perfect example of architectural metalwork where our client allowed us to design a working stairs which is a real feature in the home.

We got the glass balustrades manufactured in large panels to go from the first flight, pass by the landing and up to the second flight. This minimised the gap required in the well at the half landing.

The stringers are fabricated in our workshop and polished to 24o grit satin finish.

The installation takes some time as the centre glass panel weights over 320 kgs and is rather difficult to get into place. We manufactured a special lifting frame to handle it.

The adhesive needs to be left for over 24 hours before the cleaning process can begin.

The site crew are more than qualified metal fabricators, they need to have knowledge of glass handling, adhesive applications and cleaning processes in order to complete the glass stairs as it was designed.

By using a single glass panel to guard both flights of stairs we managed to reduce the well gap in the half landing from at least 200mm down to 45mm. This allowed us to maximise the width of the flights and so providing a far more comfortable staircase.

I will have the completed photos shortly.

Regards,
Martin.