The world through rose-tinted glasses: Vanceva
Brand story by Clare Dowdy
Kingsport, États-Unis
19.11.19
With its high functionality and equally high aesthetic quality, Vanceva® coloured laminated glass is helping to make the world a more colourful place.
Vanceva’s coloured glazing draws the eye up the Stanley Glass Technology Center in New Taipei City, Keelung
Vanceva’s coloured glazing draws the eye up the Stanley Glass Technology Center in New Taipei City, Keelung
×Architects and interior designers have long known the benefits of glazing. Well-considered glass can make internal spaces appear bigger, and bring in natural light, transforming a single room or an entire building. Modern construction techniques mean it’s now possible to create windows and skylights on an unprecedented scale. The next step for the creatively ambitious is to introduce colour. The most effective way of doing this is with interlayering.
Fabricated in its plants around the world, Vanceva’s interlayers comprise polyvinyl butyral. Sandwiched between two panes of glass, the heat- and light-stable colorants bring functional benefits to glazing. They offer protection from harmful UV radiation, glare and solar energy transmittance, and reduce solar heat gain by blocking up to 99% of damaging UV light. This helps delay colour fading and the deterioration of fabrics and furnishings.
Rainbow Glass Cliff at East Lake Harbor Canyon, in Beijing, China received an honourable mention in the 2018 Vanceva World of Colour Awards. The glass walkway runs for 128m along one side of the canyon
Rainbow Glass Cliff at East Lake Harbor Canyon, in Beijing, China received an honourable mention in the 2018 Vanceva World of Colour Awards. The glass walkway runs for 128m along one side of the canyon
×Durability is increasingly important to the architectural world and its clients. Rather than a quick fix, there is now a value in products which perform effectively for years to come.
Such high functionality works best when paired with aesthetics. By combining up to four of Vanceva’s colour interlayers, specifiers can choose from more than 17,000 transparent, translucent or solid colours – by far the biggest range of any brand of PVB interlayers. Meaning the savvy designer will see fresh potential in balconies, curtain walls, atriums, skylights, partitions, conference rooms and doors. It’s all a far cry from simply applying a coloured film to glass.
As the creative industry becomes bolder, and its specifications more exacting, it could be colour that makes the difference.
© Architonic