Door Installation

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Barn Door Installation

Sliding barn doors are great for giving your home a rustic look while saving interior space, similar to a pocket door. Interior barn doors are hung from a track mounted on the wall above a door opening. Bottom tracks aren’t necessary, but we recommend adding one to reduce swinging.

Bi-Fold Door Installation

Bi-fold doors have many advantages: they take up little space, they’re low maintenance, and they allow more natural light into your home.

Bi-Pass Door Installation

Bi-pass doors, or bypass closet doors, are simple sliding doors that roll from side to side along a top and bottom track. What makes them different from barn doors is that bi-pass doors don’t require wall space; the sliding mechanism just fits right into the doorframe.

Swinging French Door Installation

French doors are an attractive and versatile option that can be installed as both patio doors or interior doors in between rooms. You’ll want to plan your French door installation around the span of the door swing because they need space to open. Installed as a pair, French doors usually swing out from the center. Inswing and outswing doors are the two main types of french door styles. Inswing doors open inward, while outswing open away from you.

Traditional Slab Door Installation

Panel doors, also known as slab doors, are the most traditional interior door choice. Slab doors have square or oblong panels and may contain two large panels, four small ones or another combination. Door slabs come without frames, hinges, hardware, or holes for doorknobs. This makes them more affordable than pre-hung doors, which come with a frame.

Pocket Door Installation

The design Pocket doors are ideal for laundry rooms, closets, pantries, dining rooms, or anywhere that saving space is a priority. They’re also sleek interior doors that can help close off rooms for noise reduction or privacy.

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