Glass balustrade rail system on floating stairs in Toronto

Custom Glass Balustrade Rail Systems for Floating Stairs in Toronto, ON

Frameless and low-profile glass railing systems designed for OBC compliance, structural integrity, and uninterrupted sightlines throughout your Toronto interior.

Toronto Floating Stairs installs custom glass balustrade rail systems for floating stairs in Toronto, ON — designed to preserve the open visual character of the stair while meeting OBC guard rail requirements.

The railing on a floating stair does more visual work than the railing on a conventional stair. Because the tread-to-wall connection is already the most minimal it can be, any railing that adds visual weight — balusters, posts, horizontal bars — works against the floating effect the stair was designed to create. A properly detailed glass balustrade system is the only railing choice that maintains the open sightlines the stair was built for.

We install frameless glass panel systems using base channel clamp, post-and-clip, and point-fixed configurations. The choice between these systems affects the visual profile of the railing at the stair nose and the structural method used to transfer guard loads into the stringer or tread. All three configurations can be made OBC-compliant; the right choice depends on the stair geometry and the visual outcome the client wants.

Glass specification for guard systems is not the same as glass specification for decorative applications. OBC requires balustrade glass panels to resist point loads at the top of the guard — this drives the glass thickness, lamination type, and supported span. We engineer the glass specification as part of the guard system design, not as a separate supplier decision.

Hardware finish is a significant design decision in a glass balustrade. Base channels, clamps, and handrail brackets in brushed stainless, matte black, and satin brass each read very differently against the glass. We provide hardware samples before installation so there are no surprises.

Glass balustrade system types

Base channel systems clamp the glass panel into a continuous channel mounted to the tread nose or stringer face — the most common configuration for floating stair railings in Toronto. Standoff systems use discrete clamps or brackets at the top and bottom of each panel, leaving the glass mid-span fully clear. Point-fixed systems use countersunk fittings through the glass, creating a minimal point connection that is structurally sound and visually nearly invisible.

Glass balustrade railing detail on a Toronto floating stair

Design a glass balustrade for your Toronto stair

Hardware samples provided. Glass and hardware engineered together, not specified separately.

  • ✓ Frameless base channel systems
  • ✓ Standoff clamp systems
  • ✓ Point-fixed glass panels
  • ✓ Brushed stainless / matte black / satin brass hardware
  • ✓ OBC guard load engineering

Frequently Asked Questions

Is frameless glass balustrade safe and OBC-compliant? +
Yes. Tempered laminated glass in a properly engineered base channel or standoff system is tested and engineered to resist OBC guard loads. The key is that the glass specification — thickness and lamination — must be calculated for the specific span and post height, not selected from a generic table.
How thick is the glass in a frameless balustrade system? +
Residential frameless balustrade glass typically runs 12mm to 19mm tempered laminated depending on panel height and span. Taller panels and wider unsupported spans require thicker glass. We engineer the specification based on your stair geometry and OBC requirements.
Do glass balustrades on floating stairs scratch easily? +
Tempered glass is significantly harder than hardwood or soft metal finishes and resists scratching from normal household use. It's cleaned with standard glass cleaner. Hardware finishes — brushed stainless, matte black — vary in scratch resistance; matte black powder coat is the most durable option for high-contact surfaces.
Can glass balustrade be added to an existing floating stair? +
Yes, provided the existing stringer or tread nose has the structural capacity for the base channel anchoring. We assess the existing stair and specify the appropriate anchoring method. In most cases, retrofit glass balustrade installation is straightforward.
What is the handrail option for frameless glass balustrade? +
A continuous top-mounted handrail — round or D-profile stainless or painted steel tube — is required by OBC on the open side of any stair guard. We install the handrail as part of the glass balustrade scope, coordinated with the hardware finish so the full system reads as one design.

Ready to install a glass balustrade on your Toronto floating stair?

Free assessment. Hardware samples provided. Glass engineered for OBC compliance.