Rod Railings Agawam MA
Washer Wizzards Home Appliance Repair
860-890-0626
Springfield, MA
Ikos Architects
860-978-1007
Granby, CT
860-298-9333
Windsor, CT
(866) 370-9318
Ludlow, MA
Interior Design Consultants, LLC
413-596-6726
Wilbraham, MA
Via In Salum Siding LLC
860-209-3571
Vernon, CT
860 282 7107
South Windsor, CT
Rod Railings
With steel rods and stock rails, you can build a safe and profitable balustrade
by Kim and Linda Katwijk 
Cable railing has a wonderful, inconspicuous look, but it also has a few drawbacks. For one, horizontal cables form a ladder that is dangerous for children to climb. And although vertical cables are safer, installation is more challenging: It's labor intensive, there are more cables to tighten, and it can be difficult to build rails that are stout enough to resist the tension.
After I installed vertical cable railing on two decks, I knew there had to be another option. My creative juices began to flow, resulting in the vertical-rod railing system described here.
Steel Rods
For the balusters, which are about the thickness of a pencil, I use 1/4-inch-diameter rods made either of stainless steel or of plain steel that I have powder-coated locally. The standard powder-coat color is black; the rods can be custom colored, too, but the advantage to black rods is that they virtually disappear when you view a landscape through them. For water views, stainless steel rods have a similar effect, as their silver color blends with the silvery appearance of the water.
Obtaining the rods will take a little initial legwork you can't just go to any lumberyard and pick them up off the shelf. You'll need to find yourself a good metal-fabricating shop or a steel supplier.
