Employers
Approximately 53,500 glaziers are employed in the United States. Most glaziers work in construction, renovation, and repair of buildings and are employed by construction companies, glass suppliers, or glazing contractors. A good number work for manufacturers who need glass installed in some of their products.
Earnings - Outlook - Resources & Associations and more
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- Architects
- Asbestos Abatement Technicians
- Assessors and Appraisers
- Boilermakers and Mechanics
- Bricklayers and Stonemasons
- Carpenters
- Cement Masons
- Ceramics Engineers
- Chemical Engineers
- Chemical Technicians
- Chemists
- Chimney Sweeps
- Civil Engineering Technicians
- Civil Engineers
- Computer-Aided Design Drafters and Technicians
- Construction Inspectors
- Construction Laborers
- Construction Managers
- Cost Estimators
- Drafters
- Drywall Installers and Finishers
- Electricians
- Elevator Installers and Repairers
- Engineering Technicians
- Engineers
- Floor Covering Installers
- General Maintenance Mechanics
- Geodetic Surveyors
- Geologists
- Geotechnical Engineers
- Glass Manufacturing Workers
- Green Builders
- Heating and Cooling Technicians
- Industrial Designers
- Insulators/Insulation Workers
- Laboratory Testing Technicians
- Landscape Architects
- Lathers
- Locksmiths
- Manufacturing Supervisors
- Marble Setters, Tile Setters, and Terrazzo Workers
- Materials Engineers
- Millwrights
- Occupational Safety and Health Workers
- Operating Engineers
- Painters and Paperhangers
- Plasterers
- Plumbers and Pipefitters
- Quality Control Engineers and Technicians
- Real Estate Developers
- Roofers
- Sheet Metal Workers
- Smart Building Systems Designers
- Stationary Engineers
- Surveying and Mapping Technicians
- Surveyors
- Welders and Welding Technicians