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What
you can't see can protect you.
The sliding glass door to your patio...
The translucent partitions in your office...
The revolving door in the city hall lobby...
The windows at the hotel where you stayed last year...
The simple fact is we're surrounded by architectural glazing products.
Whether they enable us to look outdoors, optimize indoor lighting, enhance
aesthetics, or provide a much-needed measure of visibility or safety -- all
should be constructed in a manner that protects the people who rely on them.
Who we are...
The Safety Glazing Certification Council (SGCC) is a non-profit corporation
that provides for the certification of safety glazing materials. Established
in 1971, SGCC is comprised of safety glazing manufacturers and other parties
concerned with public safety. SGCC is managed by a board of directors
comprised of representatives from the safety glazing industry and the public
interest sector.
What we do...
SGCC maintains a certification program under which manufacturers of safety
glazing products voluntarily submit their products for testing to an
SGCC-approved independent testing laboratory. To cover testing and program
costs, a nominal per-product fee is charged to the manufacturer. The testing
procedures used in SGCC's program are consistent with those established in
ANSI Z97.1 and/or CPSC 16 CFR 1201. These specifications call for practical
safety tests -- to establish that safety glazing materials, if broken, will
tend to reduce the risk of injury or death.
How we do it...
Safety glazing products that comply with these specifications are assigned an
exclusive SGCC certification number, which identifies the product, its
manufacturer, and its plant-specific origin. This number is affixed to the
product itself as part of an SGCC-approved certification label and also
appears in SGCC's Certified Products Directory. The directory is published
twice a year and is distributed free-of-charge to more than 2,500 building
products manufacturers, architects, contractors, regulatory agencies, and
code-making groups. To ensure continued compliance, SGCC conducts a follow-up
program in which random samples of the certified products are re-tested
during an unannounced, bi-annual production facility visit.
How the SGCC benefits the safety glazing industry...
SGCC certification is in everyone's best interest. In the glazing
marketplace, specifying engineers can be confident in their selection of
SGCC-certified architectural glazing products. Builders take comfort in the
fact that the SGCC-certified glass they handle and install has met industry
standards. Building owners are afforded an extra degree of risk minimization
through third-party review. And -- whether they know it or not -- occupants
benefit from the rigorous testing that precedes SGCC certification.
More than a mere regulatory formality, SGCC certification benefits safety
glazing manufacturers, too. SGCC certification affords manufacturers the
peace of mind of knowing that their products have been subjected to
independent, third-party review and have been evaluated to accepted
standards. This translates into confidence in the marketplace, assurance of
reduced liability, and pride in one's craftsmanship. Those manufacturers who
purchase safety glazing components for use in their own completed
architectural or building products appreciate these same benefits of SGCC
certification.
Moreover, the SGCC listing and safety label are handy, visible assurances for
code-enforcement officials charged with the responsibility of ensuring safe
building construction in our nation's homes, workplaces, and public spaces.
How SGCC safety certification protects you...
Most of us enter and exit our homes, places of employment, and the public
buildings around us without a thought to glazing safety. But as windows
themselves prove, sometimes "unseen" things yield important
benefits. While we may not "see" the SGCC certification process
when we look "through" a glass door or window -- that process is
there to help protect us in case of on-the-job accidents. And in case of
mishaps in the commercial, institutional, and residential structures we
frequent on a day-to-day basis.
The Safety Glazing Certification Council... because what you can't see can
protect you.

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