Regulation 14
It is a legal requirement to have all relevant existing glazing made impact-safe and be so marked.
It is also incorporated into building regulations BS 6262 Part 4 Safety, Human Impact
The new regulations state........
Workplace Health, Safety and Welfare Approved Code of Practice L24 Regulation 14 is a legal requirement from January 1996. It is also incorporated into the building Regulations BS 6262 Part 4, Safety, Human impact. its effect is to prevent serious injury to persons through accidental collision with glazing at work.
- Every window or glazed area in a wall, partition, door or gate shall be of safety material or be protected against breakage - ie, it should not break on impact or should break safely.
- Safety glazing material must meet BS 6206 Class B in doors and side panels over 900mm wide, and Class C in those less than 900mm wide. Low level glazing must meet a minimum of BS 6206 Class C.
- This entails the use of laminated, toughened or safety glass, plastic glazing sheet that meet BS 6206, or glass with plastic film applied so that the pane of glass with the film meets BS 6206 Class A or B.
The Manifestation of Glazing
- Existing glazing must also be appropriately marked or featured so as to make it apparent and thus avoid the rick of collision because it is not properly visible.
- In particular, large uninterrupted areas of glazing where people might reasonably think they can walk straight through
For more details on 'The Manifestation of Glazing please click here
What Glazing is Affected...
'Critical locations' is the term given to describe the areas of internal and external walls, doors and partitioning which are of primary concern in terms of glazing safety. These areas are depicted here and described in the two categories below.