The Washington Glass Studio was established as part of the school in 2001 to create site specific art for architectural and landscape environments. The studio draws on the Washington Glass School Co-director's educational backgrounds in steel and glass sculpture, electronics and video media, architectural design, and ecological sustainability. Notable public art projects by Washington Glass Studio include the monumental glass doors for the
John Adams Building at the
Library of Congress. Under the auspices of the
Architect of the Capitol, the bronze doors to the John Adams Building were replaced in 2013 with code-complaint sculpted glass panels mirroring the original bronze door sculptures by American artist,
Lee Lawrie, designed to commemorate the history of the written word, depicting gods of writing as well as real-life Native American
Sequoyah. " The public art commission for artwork at the entrance to the
Laurel Branch Library was awarded to the Washington Glass Studio in 2016. The high glass-and-steel sculpture was made involving the surrounding community and library groups. In a series of glass-making workshops, images of books and stories, education and learning, and shared aspirations were created at the Washington Glass School to be incorporated into the internally illuminated tower. In 2023, a second piece of public art for the
Prince George's County Memorial Library system, "Reading the Waters," a fused glass mural, was installed at the Bladensburg Branch Library as part of the facility's renovation. == Faculty ==