Door Repair, Installation, and Replacement Services for Homes in Grand Rapids, MI
Grand Rapids homes face real punishment from freeze-thaw cycles, lake-effect moisture, and decades of settling clay soils - and every one of those forces works against doors that open, close, and seal correctly. Our crew handles the full range of door services, from fine-tuning an interior pocket door in Creston to hanging a new energy-rated exterior entry in Ottawa Hills.
EXTERIOR ENTRY
Entry and Storm Door InstallationWe hang pre-hung exterior doors, storm doors, and French doors with precise frame squaring and threshold fitting to hold up against Grand Rapids winters in neighborhoods like Cascade and Cherry Hill.
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INTERIOR PASSAGE
Interior Door Repair and ReplacementFrom pocket doors and sliding glass doors to standard passage and closet doors, we repair, re-hang, and replace interior doors throughout East Hills, Eastgate, and Belknap Lookout homes.
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HARDWARE AND SEALS
Door Hardware and Weather Seal WorkWe install smart locks, replace worn hardware, and fit new weather stripping and door thresholds so every door in your Grand Rapids home seals tightly against winter drafts and summer humidity.
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FRAME AND FINISH
Door Frame Repair and Door PaintingWe repair split or rotted door frames, square out-of-plumb jambs caused by soil movement, and handle door painting so the finished result looks right and protects the wood against West Michigan moisture. Our crew is ready to walk the project, write an honest scope, and put a date on the calendar that works for your home.
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Grand Rapids homes, especially the late-Victorian and Craftsman stock in Heritage Hill and John Ball Park, often require non-standard door widths and custom shim work that generic swap-and-go services skip. When door services intersect with adjacent work - such as drywall services around a widened rough opening, painting services on new trim, or floor services at a threshold transition - our craftspeople coordinate the scope in a single visit rather than leaving you to manage multiple contractors. Your local building department may require a permit for structural rough-opening changes, so we encourage homeowners to confirm requirements before work begins.
