 
Schwartz Looks at Installation Problems
in the Field
March 20, 2012
by Penny Stacey, pstacey@glass.com
Thomas
Schwartz, president of Building Technology Group and senior principal
for Simpson Gumpertz & Heger, offered attendees of the Building
Envelope Contractors (BEC) Conference insight into some common performance
problems and how to avoid these. The session was part of a two-part
series held yesterday afternoon. (CLICK
HERE to read about the first part of the session.)
Schwartz began by mentioning a variety of common curtainwall problems,
such as water leakage, excessive air leakage, condensation, brittle
fracture, insulating glass (IG) seal failure, and more. "The underlying
causes of performance problems comes from trends--not trends, but
nearsightedness," he said.
With regard to water leakage, Schwartz advised that "we over-rely
on sealants to prevent [this]." "The solution is to trust gravity
and not chemistry," he said. "Getting beyond the glass-metal interface
... proper perimeter flashing is required, not just the use of sealants."
When it comes to avoiding glass-metal contact in an installation,
Schwartz gave some easy-to-follow advice. "It's pretty simple--you
follow the directions and they're all in [the Glass Association
of North America Glazing Manual]," he said.
Schwartz looked at a number of causes of glass breakage and provided
some specific advice about "street walls." "Don't use tempered glass
on street walls," he warned. "But if you must, heat-soak it or apply
anchored film to it."
During a question-and-answer period, one attendee suggested that
many of these problems are problems of the past. Schwartz disagreed,
however. "If we really had solved all of these problems, I wouldn't
be putting my kids through college right now," he joked.
The BEC Conference concludes today. It is being held at the Paris
Hotel in Las Vegas.
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