- Acrylic supports large, high-traffic aquariums with complex shapes and immersive designs.
- Glass remains suitable for smaller, flat-panel displays but is limited in weight, flexibility, and immersive capability.
- UV-stabilised acrylic ensures long-term clarity in Malaysia’s tropical climate.
- Lifecycle costs for acrylic can be lower than glass in large installations when factoring in maintenance, downtime, and structural requirements.
Understanding Aquarium-grade Materials
Aquarium-grade materials are engineered for large-scale aquatic environments where structural reliability, long-term transparency, and safety compliance are essential.
Unlike standard architectural glazing, materials used in public aquariums must meet strict manufacturing and performance standards before they are suitable for exhibit use.
What Is Aquarium-grade Acrylic?
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Aquarium-grade acrylic, also known as cast acrylic or polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), is a high-performance polymer material engineered for large-scale aquariums.
Unlike standard acrylic sheets, aquarium-grade acrylic is produced through a controlled casting process that ensures uniform thickness, optical clarity, and long-term structural reliability under constant water pressure. Alternatively, some manufacturers use standard sheets to sandwich and laminate panels to build a set with designed thickness requirements.
Its ability to flex slightly under load reduces the risk of cracking in deep or oversized tanks, making it ideal for immersive exhibits. In certain thicknesses, acrylic is almost bulletproof.
What Is Aquarium-grade Glass?
Aquarium-grade glass is a silica-based material used for viewing panels and enclosures in aquarium construction.
It is generally produced as float glass and then tempered or laminated through controlled heating, cooling, and bonding processes to meet safety and load requirements for aquatic environments.
Compared to standard architectural glass, aquarium-grade glass is selected and processed specifically for use in water-filled structures. It is commonly used in flat-panel aquarium designs that require standardised dimensions and rigid panel construction.
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Key Differences Between Acrylic and Glass
Material choice influences nearly every aspect of public aquarium performance, from structural behaviour to maintenance demands. Acrylic and glass both serve as viewing materials, but their core differences lead to distinct performance characteristics.
1. Structural Strength and Impact Resistance
Acrylic
Acrylic offers significantly higher impact resistance than glass of the same thickness—up to 17 times greater. Unlike glass, acrylic is effectively shatterproof, meaning it flexes under sudden impacts rather than cracking or breaking.
In public aquariums, where accidental bumps from equipment, visitors, or falling objects are common, this flexibility helps prevent structural failures. Acrylic panels absorb impact by flexing and returning to their original shape, allowing a 4-inch panel to withstand pressures similar to those of an 8-inch glass panel.
Glass
Glass is a rigid, hard, yet brittle material. It maintains excellent surface smoothness and resists scratches, but sudden impacts, uneven stress, or pressure from large water volumes can cause cracks that propagate rapidly.
Deep tanks require thicker glass, lamination, or tempering to maintain safety, adding weight and structural requirements without enhancing visitor experience.
2. Weight and Structural Load
Acrylic
Acrylic is approximately 50% lighter than glass (1.19 g/cm³ vs. 2.5 g/cm³). This significantly reduces structural load, installation complexity, and crane requirements.
This weight advantage allows larger panels or curved designs without requiring excessive reinforcement.
In large public aquarium projects, lighter panels also simplify handling during construction and place less stress on supporting frames and foundations.
Glass
Glass is considerably heavier, especially in thick panels required for deep tanks. The additional weight increases demands on structural supports and foundations, influencing overall design and construction costs.
Transporting, installing, and supporting large glass panels also requires more equipment and labour. Careful planning is necessary to prevent accidents or damage during assembly and operation.
3. Joining Strength and Structural Integrity
Acrylic
Acrylic panels are joined by chemical bonding, resulting in seams that are often stronger than the surrounding material.
This creates continuous, seamless connections without mechanical fasteners, enhancing structural integrity and evenly distributing stress across large panels.
Modern fabrication allows panels up to 30 feet wide and 8 inches thick to be bonded as single units, reducing potential weak points at joints. These strong bonds make acrylic reliable for large-scale aquariums, ensuring long-term stability under high water pressure. In some unique cases, these large panels are bonded on site due to large span and height dimensions.
Glass
Glass panels rely on mechanical joints, such as bolted or silicone-sealed connections, to assemble large tanks. These joints are weaker than the glass itself and introduce visible seams.
Large glass panels require careful design to distribute stress across multiple connections. Mechanical joints increase installation complexity and maintenance demands, particularly in deep or high-pressure tanks.
4. Optical Clarity and Colour Accuracy
Acrylic
Acrylic transmits up to 92% of visible light with minimal colour distortion. Its refractive index of 1.49 is closer to that of water (1.33), reducing distortion at the water panel interface and improving visual immersion.
Unlike standard glass, acrylic does not develop a green tint as thickness increases. This allows true colour reproduction even in panels exceeding 6 inches thick, making acrylic well-suited for photography, video capture, coral exhibits, and educational displays.
Glass
Standard aquarium glass generally transmits 85 to 89% of visible light and exhibits a green tint due to iron content. This colour shift becomes more pronounced in thick panels and can affect how visitors perceive marine life.
Low-iron glass can approach acrylic’s clarity, but it costs approximately 2.5 to 3.5 times more and remains limited to flat panels. In large installations, compensatory lighting is often required to offset colour distortion, increasing operational complexity and cost.
In short, both materials provide excellent clarity in smaller applications. For large, thick viewing panels, acrylic delivers more consistent optical performance and colour accuracy.
5. Surface Durability and Maintenance
Acrylic
Acrylic scratches more easily than glass but offers a key advantage: repairability. Surface scratches can be polished out using specialised equipment, restoring optical clarity and extending panel lifespan.
Protective coatings, visitor barriers, and controlled access reduce scratching in high-traffic areas, and most public aquariums report minimal long-term issues when these measures are in place.
Glass
Glass is more resistant to scratching and generally maintains its surface with minimal intervention. In public aquariums where visitors may touch viewing panels, routine cleaning is usually sufficient to preserve clarity.
However, glass cannot be repaired once deeply scratched or damaged. Significant surface damage often requires full-panel replacement, including downtime and emergency procedures.
6. Performance in Tropical Climates
Acrylic
Modern aquarium-grade acrylic incorporates UV stabilisers, including UV absorbers and HALS, to prevent yellowing and preserve optical clarity over decades of exposure.
It performs reliably in high-UV, high-humidity environments common across Southeast Asia.
Also, acrylic tolerates temperature fluctuations well and resists moisture-related degradation. Its lighter weight also reduces structural demands, which is particularly beneficial in tropical construction where soil conditions can limit foundation capacity and increase engineering complexity.
Glass
Glass remains chemically stable and largely unaffected by UV exposure. However, its weight presents challenges in tropical construction, requiring heavier structural support systems.
These systems increase the amount of steel and concrete exposed to humid, corrosive conditions, thereby increasing long-term maintenance requirements.
Thermal expansion and contraction in large glass panels can introduce stress at joints, requiring careful design, regular inspection, and ongoing maintenance to mitigate cracking or failure.
Aquarium Material Comparison Table
| Aspects | Acrylic | Glass |
|---|---|---|
| Impact Resistance |
Up to 17times stronger; flexes, shatterproof | Brittle; cracks under impact; deep tanks need thicker panels |
| Weight & Handling |
Around 50% lighter; easier install; supports larger panels | Heavy; needs strong supports; complex handling |
| Joining Strength |
Chemical bonds; seamless, strong; panels up to 30 feet | Mechanical joints; visible seams; weaker; adds complexity |
| Optical Clarity | Over 92% light transmissibility; true color; low distortion | 85 to 89% light transmissibility; green tint in thick panels; flat panels only |
| Surface Durability |
Scratches are repairable; polishing restores clarity | Scratch-resistant; cannot be polished; replacement needed if damaged |
| Tropical Performance |
UV-stabilised; resists heat & humidity; lighter load | Chemically stable; heavy; thermal stress; supports exposed to corrosion |
| Best For | Large exhibits, curved designs, high-traffic areas, tropical climates | Small rectangular tanks, extremely limited budgets, low-traffic controlled environments |
Need expert help beyond material selection? Learn how BLU Technologies builds world-class aquariums from concept to installation.
Public Aquarium Project Considerations
While understanding material differences provides context, practical project considerations often guide the final decision.
Project Size and Tank Depth
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The choice of material often depends on aquarium size and tank depth, as each scale presents different structural, design, and installation considerations:
- Small aquariums (Less than 1,000 gallons): Either acrylic or glass works effectively. Glass may be cheaper initially, while acrylic provides additional design flexibility.
- Medium aquariums (1,000 to 10,000 gallons): Acrylic offers weight savings and larger panel options, though glass remains viable for simple rectangular displays.
- Large aquariums (More than 10,000 gallons): Acrylic is generally preferred for landmark installations. Its lighter weight, ability to create large panels, and flexibility make it practical for deep or complex exhibits.
For planning purposes, tools such as this tank weight calculator can help estimate loads for different materials and tank sizes.
Visitor Traffic and Safety Requirements
High-traffic or interactive exhibits benefit from acrylic’s ability to flex under impact. This reduces the risk of cracking and protects both visitors and installations. Any minor surface scratches can be polished away, maintaining visual quality over time.
Glass panels are harder but brittle and may fracture under similar conditions, making acrylic safer for visitor-heavy areas.
Budget and Long-Term Cost of Ownership
While acrylic panels can cost 2 to 3 times as much per square foot as glass, their lighter weight and ease of installation can offset much of the upfront premium.
Reduced structural requirements, reduced crane usage, and lower labour needs can cut installation costs by 20 to 35%, making acrylic a competitive choice for medium to large aquariums.
Over a 20-year lifecycle, acrylic often provides a lower total cost of ownership through:
- Reduced structural maintenance due to lighter loads
- Ability to polish and restore panels instead of full replacement
- Lower risk of catastrophic failure and associated downtime
- Enhanced visitor experience, which can support higher attendance and revenue
Design Flexibility and Immersive Experience
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Material selection strongly influences the design and construction of large aquariums. Acrylic allows curved walls, tunnels, and panoramic panels that enhance visitor immersion and engagement.
In contrast, glass is limited to flat panels. Curved tunnels require multiple joined panels, heavier supports, higher costs, and visible seams. Visitor experiences are less immersive, and large-scale designs are more challenging and expensive.
Making the Right Material Choice
Every public aquarium project has unique requirements, but general principles guide material selection:
Choose Acrylic When:
- Tank capacity exceeds 5,000 gallons
- Design includes curves, tunnels, or panoramic walls
- Building structural capacity is limited
- Long-term operational efficiency matters
- Creating immersive, landmark visitor experiences
- Operating in tropical or high-UV environments
- Impact resistance and visitor safety are priorities
Consider Glass When:
- Building small, simple rectangular displays under 1,000 gallons
- Budget is extremely limited and structural support exists
- Design vision is traditional and uses only flat panels
- Scratch resistance is the primary concern
- Installation is in controlled indoor environments
For most public aquariums, especially those designed to serve as attractions rather than simple displays, acrylic provides the performance, flexibility, and long-term value that glass cannot match.
See why investing in public aquariums matters—read our article on The Benefits of Public Aquariums for Society and Nature and discover their lasting impact.
The Clear Choice for Large-Scale Excellence
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Material selection is just the start. Turning acrylic’s technical advantages into a world-class aquarium requires expertise in structural engineering, life support systems, fabrication, and installation.
BLU Technologies brings decades of experience delivering landmark aquatic installations across Southeast Asia and beyond. From feasibility studies to fabrication, bonding, panel installation, and ongoing maintenance, we manage every aspect of large-scale aquarium development.
While glass remains suitable for small, simple displays, acrylic offers superior impact strength, lighter weight, seamless design flexibility, and exceptional clarity for immersive, high-traffic exhibits. In Malaysia’s tropical climate, UV-stabilised acrylic provides reliable long-term performance for deep tanks, tunnels, and curved panels.
Our Key Advantages:
- End-to-end expertise: Material sourcing, structural engineering, acrylic fabrication, and installation
- Immersive design capability: Curved panels, tunnels, and seamless large-format displays
- Operational reliability: Life support system integration and long-term maintenance support
Partnering with the right team ensures your vision becomes a captivating, safe, and durable attraction. Contact Blu Technologies to explore how our premium acrylic solutions can transform your aquatic vision into a landmark experience.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. Can acrylic aquarium panels really be polished to remove scratches?
Yes. Acrylic can be polished with progressively finer abrasives and buffing compounds to restore clarity. Unlike glass, scratches can be repaired, extending panel life and avoiding costly replacements. Most public aquariums schedule polishing during maintenance.
2. How thick do acrylic panels need to be for a large public aquarium?
Thickness depends on water depth, panel size, and support. A common rule is about 1 inch of acrylic per foot of water. Deep tanks may use 4- to 6-inch panels, while shallow tanks use 2- to 3-inch panels. Unsupported spans require thicker panels.
Exact specifications should be calculated by structural engineers. Consult Blu Technologies for professional guidance on panel thickness and installation requirements.
3. What happens if an acrylic aquarium panel is damaged beyond polishing?
Severe scratches or gouges can be repaired with acrylic welding and polishing. Full panel replacement is rare but faster and less disruptive than glass replacement, thanks to its lighter weight and bonding capabilities.
4. How long does acrylic last in a public aquarium setting?
UV-stabilised acrylic generally lasts 30 to50 years with proper maintenance. Regular polishing and cleaning can extend lifespan, and many aquariums from the 1980s to1990s still use their original panels.
5. How do acrylic and glass compare in terms of environmental sustainability?
Both materials are recyclable, but acrylic’s lighter weight reduces transport emissions and structural material needs. Glass production is energy-intensive despite using abundant raw materials.
Acrylic’s repairability and long lifespan often lower its environmental footprint over the aquarium’s lifecycle compared with glass.


