Glazing
Storefronts, walls, skylights — elevation by elevation.
OmniTakeoff reads architectural elevations and storefront schedules to produce a glazing takeoff with frame linear feet, infill SF, hardware count, and finish per spec.
Kawneer · YKK · Vistawall
Frame systems
120+
Glass types indexed
Substantial improvement after active learning
Recognizer accuracy after active learning
What the takeoff produces
A glazing takeoff that survives review.
Every line item carries the source it came from — sheet, detail, and spec paragraph — so the senior estimator can audit in minutes, not hours.
- Storefront / curtain-wall linear feet by frame system
- Glass infill square feet by glazing type and tinting
- Door count with hardware schedule pulled from the door schedule
- Skylights and clerestory glazing reported separately
- Sealant linear feet derived from frame perimeter
Glazing features
Built for the way your office actually bids.
Elevation parser
Frames, mullions, and infill panels picked off architectural elevations as structured rows.
Schedule-aware
Storefront and window schedules become tabular line items — no retyping.
Spec-paragraph linking
Each row points at the spec paragraph that called the frame system, glass type, and hardware set.
Hardware breakout
Closer / lever / lockset counts come from the door schedule, not assumed by frame count.
Frequently asked
Questions we hear from estimators.
- Do you handle structural glazing separately?
- Yes — structural / silicone-glazed walls report as their own scope group with the silicone perimeter linear feet broken out.
- What about thermal-broken vs standard frames?
- Frame system selection comes from the spec, not assumed; the takeoff respects whichever family the wall-type schedule called.
Next move
Bring a real glazing bid. We'll run it.
The pilot is end-to-end: real plan set, real takeoff, real proposal. No demo data.