victorian doors for sale birmingham

We're sorry, the page you were looking for does not exist.Carriage Doors Swing Out Real Carriage Door Company crafts outswing carriage garage doors and manufactures barn door hardware. We specialize in swing-out wood doors, sliding garage doors, bifolding garage doors, and sliding barn door hardware. Enjoy solid wood quality and old world building methods. For a finishing touch, grace your home with our custom entry doors, sliding doors, and wood interior doors. Visit our gallery to see for yourself. Wood doors Swing, Slide, or Fold Our wood garage doors don't just appear to do something, they actually do swing, slide and fold! Our wooden carriage doors say to everyone who sees your home that you value that which is real, that which has character. Superior construction methods make our wood doors beautiful on both sides. Beautiful Z Braces and Craftsman details are visible on both sides because our wood doors are built with true solid wood members. Don't settle for superficial exterior beauty, your wood garage doors should be beautiful through and through.

Automated Swing Out Garage Doors You don’t have to sacrifice convenience for authentic beauty. At the touch of a remote, our electric carriage door openers open your swing or slide garage door. You can have a carriage house garage door, not just the "carriage-style" look, with the ease of automatic operation. Sliding garage door openers are also available. We manufacture high-quality barn door hardware for sliding doors. Featured on the House Crashers TV Show, our horizontal rolling barn door hardware is suitable for exterior or interior doors. Featuring architectural proportions, durable finishes, and high quality ball bearings, our barn door hardware is built to last. We have styles to match both traditional and modern barn door hardware styles. From beautiful brushed stainless steel to our high quality powder coated oil rubbed bronze, we can match your existing door hardware finishes. Our architectural sliding hardware is built to exacting standards with careful attention to details.

Our doors were featured on Man Caves in the "Jimmie Johnson" episode (Season 4, Episode 15) on the DIY Network. NASCAR racing champion Jimmie Johnson gave his dad a Man Cave for Father's Day. Don installs his signature carriage doors in this one hour special.
soft top for 2008 jeep wrangler 4 doorWatch the video above!
outdoor furniture for sale cairns See more Man Cave pictures
car window repair lombard il As seen in This Old House and Old House Journal! Our doors are featured in an article on garage conversions: See Main Gallery for more pictures. Featured Links: Request Info! | What our customers say about us They certainly are the nicest looking garage doors I have ever seen.

See more quotes » Featured at Real Carriage Doors Choose from our two opener systems for swing-out automation of our carriage doors: 1. Wall-Mounted Automatic Openers (AO-W2).If your application requires ceiling room, Wall-Mounted Automatic Openers can free up your ceiling by mounting directly above the doors on the inside wall. These openers are quiet too, so you can open your new carriage doors in peace! Sliding Door Automatic Openers (AOSB, AOSL) Don't have the clearance needed for swinging doors? RCD now offers a system to automate sliding doors. This versatile opener is available in single leaf or bi-parting systems. As with our other openers, motors are low-voltage, which means extremely quiet operation. Read more about Sliding Barn Door Operators. Northwest Home - January 2009 Read about us in Northwest Home, the special section of the January 2009 issue of Seattle Magazine. Old House Interiors - Dec. 2008 Our custom wood doors in a garage doors special.

See our carriage doors featured on the cover of Modern Woodworking (February 2008). Washington CEO Magazine - November 2008 Read about our founder Don in Washington CEO (November 2008).WHERE TO BUY A MASONITE DOORMasonite doors are available through thousands of local dealers and home centers. To locate a Masonite dealer or home center near you, simply key in your zip/postal code into the space provided, click search and we'll provide a list of dealers and home centers in your area. You can also find a dealer or home center through our product gallery. I AM A... *When changes in trust laws forced the F.O. Birmingham Memorial Land Trust to sell its big, familiar Victorian house just north of downtown, the city of Wylie stepped in to preserve it.The Wylie City Council voted in April to spend $330,000 to buy the historic Brown house, informally known as the Birmingham House, at 301 S. Ballard Ave.“When we found out that the trust was going to sell it, it was a little bit of our history that we didn’t want to get lost,” Wylie Mayor Eric Hogue said.

“We didn’t want it cut up into offices. We wanted to keep it because it’s part of what we are and part of who we are.” William Thomas and Mattie Brown originally built a small folk-style Victorian house at the corner of Ballard Avenue and Jefferson Street. Thomas Brown was one of the city’s first aldermen and owned a mercantile shop on Ballard Avenue.In 1905, the Browns decided to relocate their old house just to the west of its original site and build a grander home. The newer, two-story house — now a Texas Historical Commission landmark — features seven rooms downstairs, a larger room and bathroom upstairs, a turret and fish scale shingles.The house remained in the Brown family until 1931, when it was sold. After passing through several other families, the F.O. Birmingham Memorial Land Trust bought the home in 1989.When the Birmingham Memorial Land Trust got the house, it had undergone several changes. The distinctive turret had been removed, and several stained glass windows were replaced by French doors.

Hogue, who was appointed as chair of the trust as part of his official capacity as mayor, says the trust got lucky when restoring the house: They found the original stained glass windows that had been removed.“They found them boxed up underneath the house,” he said.In all, Hogue said the Birmingham Memorial Land Trust spent more than $500,000 in 1989 to restore the house, including finishing out the top floor and replacing the turret.The Birmingham Memorial Land Trust decided to sell the house because changes in federal trust laws meant they would be paying so much every year to keep the house on their books.“The trust would basically have gone out of business in a decade,” Hogue said.Because the trust continued to care for the house until it was sold, the city does not need to do any further maintenance or renovation work., Hogue said.The city is looking at several options for the house, Parks Superintendent Robert Diaz said.“I think the big emphasis is going to be rentals and having this facility open during special events,” Diaz said.

“And then looking at trying to develop some history around the house and having something here that speaks to that.”City officials are working on the 2015-16 budget, and Diaz said the parks department will consider hiring a consultant to come in and look at what can be done with the house once its budget is set.Right now, Diaz and his staff plan to work on setting rental fees for the structure. Proposed fees will be brought to the park board and the City Council for approval.“This is kind of our first step,” Diaz said.Recreation Manager Carmen Powlen said city representatives have also been touring and looking at similar historic facilities in Mesquite, Dallas and McKinney to see what those communities are doing.“This is new territory for us,” she said. “We’ve been doing lots of research.”The city opened the house during its Bluegrass festival in late June, offering residents a glimpse at the interior and free watermelon on the lawn. Diaz says the event was a hit, even as the house remains mostly unfurnished.“