Last updated: February 13, 2026

Glass Block HQ, a division of Evolve Egress & Exteriors (“we,” “us,” or “our”), operates the website glassblockhq.com. This Privacy Policy explains how we collect, use, and protect your personal information when you visit our website or use our services.

Information We Collect

We may collect the following types of personal information:

How We Use Your Information

We use your personal information to:

Information Sharing

We do not sell, trade, or rent your personal information to third parties. We may share your information with:

Data Security

We implement reasonable security measures to protect your personal information from unauthorized access, use, or disclosure. However, no method of transmission over the internet is 100% secure.

Cookies and Tracking

Our website uses cookies and similar technologies to enhance your browsing experience and analyze website traffic. You can control cookie settings through your browser preferences.

Your Rights

You have the right to:

Children’s Privacy

Our website is not intended for children under 13. We do not knowingly collect personal information from children.

Changes to This Policy

We may update this Privacy Policy from time to time. Changes will be posted on this page with an updated revision date.

Contact Us

If you have questions about this Privacy Policy or your personal data, please contact us:

Call Us

Our team is ready to assist you. Call one of our offices using the phone numbers below or text us at (216) 302-7116

Is this basement space a bedroom or a finished living space?

Glass block is a strong fit for privacy, security, utility rooms, laundry rooms, bathrooms, garages, storage areas, and other non-bedroom basement openings. If the space behind the window is a bedroom, a short-term rental sleeping room, an Airbnb sleeping room, or finished living space people actually use, you should evaluate egress before you install glass block. Ohio Residential Code requires a code-compliant emergency escape opening for basement bedrooms. Finished basement living spaces may require — or strongly benefit from — compliant egress, depending on the room’s use, the scope of the finish-out, and your local building department.

Glass block does not open. It should not be treated as an emergency escape opening. Glass Block HQ installs basement glass-block windows for non-sleeping spaces; for basement sleeping rooms and finished living areas, our sister company Evolve Egress installs code-compliant egress windows. Not sure which one fits? Get a free estimate — we’ll help you figure out which option actually fits.

Get a free Evolve Egress estimate →

Or call the Evolve Egress team directly:

See Evolve’s basement-bedroom egress page

Egress windows — Evolve Egress

Is this basement space a bedroom or a finished living space?

Glass block is a strong fit for privacy, security, utility rooms, laundry rooms, bathrooms, garages, storage areas, and other non-bedroom basement openings. If the space behind the window is a bedroom, a short-term rental sleeping room, an Airbnb sleeping room, or finished living space people actually use, you should evaluate egress before you install glass block. Ohio Residential Code requires a code-compliant emergency escape opening for basement bedrooms. Finished basement living spaces may require — or strongly benefit from — compliant egress, depending on the room’s use, the scope of the finish-out, and your local building department.

Glass block does not open. It should not be treated as an emergency escape opening. Glass Block HQ installs basement glass-block windows for non-sleeping spaces; for basement sleeping rooms and finished living areas, our sister company Evolve Egress installs code-compliant egress windows. Not sure which one fits? Get a free estimate — we’ll help you figure out which option actually fits.

Get a free Evolve Egress estimate →

Or call the Evolve Egress team directly:

See Evolve’s basement-bedroom egress page

Egress windows — Evolve Egress

Is this basement space a bedroom or a finished living space?

Glass block is a strong fit for privacy, security, utility rooms, laundry rooms, bathrooms, garages, storage areas, and other non-bedroom basement openings. If the space behind the window is a bedroom, a short-term rental sleeping room, an Airbnb sleeping room, or finished living space people actually use, you should evaluate egress before you install glass block. Ohio Residential Code requires a code-compliant emergency escape opening for basement bedrooms. Finished basement living spaces may require — or strongly benefit from — compliant egress, depending on the room’s use, the scope of the finish-out, and your local building department.

Glass block does not open. It should not be treated as an emergency escape opening. Glass Block HQ installs basement glass-block windows for non-sleeping spaces; for basement sleeping rooms and finished living areas, our sister company Evolve Egress installs code-compliant egress windows. Not sure which one fits? Get a free estimate — we’ll help you figure out which option actually fits.

Get a free Evolve Egress estimate →

Or call the Evolve Egress team directly:

See Evolve’s basement-bedroom egress page

Egress windows — Evolve Egress

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