Steel Windows

Steel Curtain Windows

Steel curtain wall — floor-to-ceiling glass held together with a grid of thin steel mullions. Maximum daylight, minimum visible frame.

Steel Curtain Windows

A curtain wall is a non-structural glass skin hung on a structural frame. The steel (or occasionally aluminum) grid holds the glass; the building’s structure holds the grid. In residential work, we use it for atrium walls, stairwell walls, and two-story great rooms.

Build approach

  • Structural steel sub-frame engineered per opening
  • Steel mullions: 2-1/2″ or 3″ depth, 1″ sightline
  • Glass infill: insulated low-E, sometimes spider-fitted laminated glass for oversized lights
  • Continuous thermal break so the grid doesn’t sweat in summer

Sizes

Effectively unlimited — we’ve built curtain walls 30 feet tall and 50 feet wide. Individual lights (glass panes within the grid) commonly run 4′ × 8′ to 6′ × 10′.

Glazing options

  • Double-pane insulated (standard)
  • Triple-pane for extreme energy performance
  • Laminated tempered for safety (required above 8′ in most jurisdictions)
  • Solar-tinted or ceramic-fritted for west-facing exposures

Where they shine

South- and east-facing elevations with a view. Two-story foyers. Stairwells. Indoor-outdoor transitions where a wall of sliders is structurally limited.

Coordination

Curtain walls are engineered, permitted, and installed as part of the building shell — not a finish-out drop-in. Schedule us early in framing so we can coordinate anchor locations with the structural engineer.

Specifications

Frame Material 14-gauge steel mullions, 2-1/2" – 3" depth
Sightline 1" visible
Glass Dual or triple-pane insulated low-E
Max Size Engineered per opening (30'+ common)
Thermal Break Continuous polyamide strut
Finish Powder-coat, interior/exterior differ option
Lead Time 14–20 weeks
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