Recycled Glass Splashback Panel Completed and Ready for Installation

Image courtesy of Craft Hub EU, Shelley Doolan. Photo by Garry Bartlett.

This amber‑coloured recycled glass panel, created entirely from a variety of waste beer bottles, has now been completed and prepared for installation as a bespoke kitchen splashback. Measuring 92 × 70 cm, the panel has been cut into six pieces, showcasing the potential of post‑consumer glass when transformed through skilled making and thoughtful design.

Originally fused as a single sheet, the panel has since been cut to size, edge polished, and finished for a private client. The final splashback will consist of six precisely cut sections designed to sit flush with one another, with no visible grout line, creating a seamless surface framed by natural wood. The outer edges have been polished, the internal edges arrised, and the entire surface treated with an anti‑fingerprint nanocoating to ensure durability and easy maintenance.

The panel has been carefully packed and is now ready for transport, we’re very much looking forward to seeing it installed in its new home.

If you’re curious about the material, the making process, or want to explore more work created from recycled glass, visit my page on Craft Hub EU.

Stay tuned and if you’d like to learn more about recycled‑glass work or discuss a commission, you can reach me on tyra@osengreesreflection.com

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Join Dr Tyra Oseng‑Rees for a live CPD webinar: “Recycled Materials in Architecture: From Waste to Wonder.”