The accident at the Perumbavoor branch of Bank of Baroda this June was indeed tragic, but it need not have been so. If only the bank had bothered about the safety of its customers and installed tempered safety glass made to Indian Standards specifications, 46-year-old Beena Paul would be alive today.Get more news about Double Glazed Glass,you can vist our website!
The bank’s door was made of annealed glass, which by all safety norms, should not have been used in the door. This glass not only breaks easily on human impact, but produces jagged shards that can cause grievous injury and death. And that’s exactly what happened to Beena — the sharp glass pieces pierced her abdomen, leading to her death. If the bank had used third-party quality certified, tempered safety glass, it would not have broken so easily and even if it did, it would have disintegrated into small, blunt granular pieces, least likely to cause such injuries.
That should answer your question about the safety of glass doors — the risk of injury arises only when builders install unsafe, annealed glass, instead of toughened, tempered safety glass or laminated safety glass. Both are not easy to break and even if they do shatter, the former breaks into small granular fragments while with the latter, the pieces are remain together due to the plastic layer that is baked between the two pieces of glass.
Of course, just any tempered or laminated glass will not do. They have to have the required thickness and should have passed a number of safety tests such as fragmentation test, resistance to shock, resistance to human impact, fracture and adhesion test, etc. That is the reason why they should comply with the standards formulated by the Bureau of Indian Standards and should bear the ISI mark.
Since ‘walk through’ accidents involving glass doors or partitions or walls are caused on account of the see-through nature of the glass or in other words, the impression of unimpeded path of travel, it is also absolutely necessary to have manifestations to make the glass visible.
In fact, an important document in this regard is the ‘Guidelines on the use of Glass in Buildings: Human Safety’. Drawn up by the Confederation of Construction Products and Services (CCPS), a non profit organisation, with active participation of all stakeholders, both private and government, the guidelines tell you what kind of glass should be used in certain critical areas of buildings to prevent injuries to users. The guidelines also tell you about the kind of manifestations the glass should have to make it visible. Brought out first in 2007, the guidelines have been updated regularly, the last being in 2015.
The Central Public Works Department, Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, has often written to the state governments and asked them to incorporate the guidelines in their building bylaws so as to make it mandatory. I must also mention that Part 4 (safety related to human impact) of the Code of Practice for Use of Glass in Buildings, brought out by the BIS, also deals with the topic. The glass and glazing safety requirements also figure in the National Building Code-2016.