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Try This Hack for Building an Inexpensive Glass Panel Door

Glass Panel Door Tech Art Try This Hack For Building An Inexpensive Glass Panel Door

Designing a Glass Panel Door

  • Door design: Custom glass panel doors can be expensive, starting at $500 and rising from there. One of the main factors is the cost of tempered glass. In designing this custom glass panel door, we discovered a hack that saved us money: We went with tempered glass cutting boards, which are cheaper and come in lots of sizes. You can build your door out of whatever wood you can afford, from pine 2x4s to beautiful hardwood.
  • There are four basic components of a glass panel door: stiles, rails, mullions, and glass panels (see figure above).
  • Three things to consider when designing a glass panel door:
    • Number of panels;
    • Size of the panels;
    • Dimensions of your doorway.

The other components of the door will vary in size depending on those considerations, since you’re basically building the door around the glass panels.

  • Door size and measuring: Start by measuring the finished opening of your doorway, left to right and top to bottom. Then subtract a 1/2-in. from each dimension to get the size of your door.
  • Door construction:  We put this door together with a basic woodworking joint called a “spline joint.” The stiles, rails and mullions feature matching grooves cut in the center of the edge of the boards. A strip of wood (spline) is inserted and glued into the two boards, like a mortise and tenon or tongue and groove joint. The glass panels go into the grooves as well.
  • Component sizes: To achieve a pleasant symmetry in your door design:
    • The two stiles should be a minimum of 3-1/2-in. wide, with the height equal to that of the finished door;
    • The top rail and mullions all can be the same height, a minimum of 4-1/2-inches;
    • The width of the rails and mullions will equal the finished door width minus the combined width of the stiles;
    • Finally, to figure out the height of the bottom rail:
      • Start with the finished height of the door;
      • Subtract the total combined height of all the other components (panels/rails/mullions);
      • Then subtract the depths of all grooves in the mullions and rails.

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