loading . . . Mechanochemical Synthesis Enables Melting, Glass Formation and Glass–Ceramic Conversion in a Cadmium-Based Zeolitic Imidazolate Framework Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are versatile materials with tunable properties and broad applications. Here, we report the first cadmium-based zeolitic imidazolate framework (ZIF) glass, prepared by melt-quenching sub-micrometer-sized Cd(im)2 particles (im– = imidazolate) obtained via mechanochemical synthesis. This route increases defect density and reduces crystallite domain size, lowering the melting temperature from 461 °C (for larger solution-synthesized microcrystals) to 455 °C, thereby mitigating thermal decomposition during melting. Crystalline Cd(im)2 adopts a two-fold interpenetrated diamondoid (dia-c) topology, assembled from tetrahedral Cd2+ centers and im– linkers. Rapid cooling of the Cd(im)2 melt yields a monolithic glass with a glass transition temperature (Tg) of 175 °C. Structural analysis confirms that short-range connectivity within individual networks is maintained, whereas interactions between the interpenetrated networks are disrupted in the glass. Upon reheating, partial recrystallization produces a single-component glass–ceramic with enhanced mechanical properties, an unprecedented behavior in melt-quenched ZIF glasses. Investigations of thermal parameters (cooling rates) and partial linker substitution reveal strategies for tuning the phase behavior of both glass and glass–ceramic. These findings extend ZIF glass systems to second-row transition metal ions and underscore mechanochemical synthesis as a tool for tailoring the thermal properties of MOFs. This dual-phase functionality, combining glassy and crystalline domains of identical composition within a single material, offers potential for applications in thermal energy storage, phase change memory, and optics. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5c02767