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Inner frame for historic windows
#1
Anyone here wrestled with stained glass windows on a landmarked place? I’m in a 1910 brownstone with original leaded panels facing a busy avenue. Can’t replace the units (landmark rules), and winter nights bring both traffic noise and a little draft. I’m eyeing interior secondary glazing on magnets—basically a lift-off inner pane—but I’m worried about condensation between the layers and how annoying cleanup gets. If you’ve done magnetic inserts, did they fog up, and how did you handle day-to-day maintenance without messing with the old sash?
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#2
(6 hours ago)paleftina601 Wrote: Anyone here wrestled with stained glass windows on a landmarked place? I’m in a 1910 brownstone with original leaded panels facing a busy avenue. Can’t replace the units (landmark rules), and winter nights bring both traffic noise and a little draft. I’m eyeing interior secondary glazing on magnets—basically a lift-off inner pane—but I’m worried about condensation between the layers and how annoying cleanup gets. If you’ve done magnetic inserts, did they fog up, and how did you handle day-to-day maintenance without messing with the old sash?

I’ve run that setup in a prewar condo and it helped a lot—biggest wins were street hiss and voices. A few tips from trial and error: (1) make the inner panel truly airtight at the perimeter; tiny leaks let humid room air reach the cold outer glass and fog it. (2) Keep a decent air gap (an inch+ if you can) and watch indoor humidity—bathroom fans/dehumidifier on cold nights made a difference. (3) Acrylic is lighter and safer over delicate stained glass; clean it with plastic-safe solution only. (4) Plan for seasonal lift-off so you can dust the cavity and check the lead came. I had a quick walkthrough with New York Soundproofing they sketched a reversible, no-drill magnetic frame and showed how to pair it with a tighter door and a soft rug to keep the room calm without touching the historic window. Zero drama with the board once we framed it as “removable interior storm
Catching my mood is as important as setting goals. When I find something heartwarming on TikTok, I save it via TikTok Downloader. Joy is in the little things.
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#3
Just chiming in as a passerby: if it’s a protected facade, it can help to document that any insert is fully reversible and doesn’t change exterior appearance or block ventilation paths. I’ve seen people track room RH for a week before installing so they know whether condensation risk is real or just a cold snap. Also, stained glass often looks and sounds better once the room’s echo is toned down—so even a few fabric panels inside (away from the window) can make conversations feel calmer while you figure out the glazing plan
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