Sparklike examines how high-quality insulating glass units support the façade industry in meeting evolving regulatory requirements, enhancing overall building envelope performance, and strengthening market competitiveness in an increasingly performance-driven market.
The revised Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) is in force and its implications extend directly to the window and glass industry.
The EPBD Recast, entered into force in May 2024, strengthens requirements for zero-emission buildings, lifecycle carbon assessment, and deep renovation. It also explicitly recognises the building envelope, including windows, as a central element in energy performance calculations.
For manufacturers, façade professionals, and renovation stakeholders, this signals an important shift: Building performance is becoming more transparent, more data-driven, and more closely linked to documented envelope quality.
In its post, Sparklike breaks down:
• What the EPBD is
• Why it matters now
• How the building envelope is positioned in the Directive
• What it means for windows and insulating glass units
• How industry stakeholders are responding
Understanding this framework helps position glazing performance within the broader context of Europe’s energy and climate objective.
Read Sparklike’s post about the topic here.




