Entryway Doors Orange Park FL

In the never-ending quest for a unique entryway that sets their home apart and adds striking curb appeal, owners of high-end homes are clamoring for doors made out of woods that don't grow in their backyard in Orange Park.

Budget Blinds of Orange Park
(866) 839-4770
3600 Peoria Rd, Ste 203
Orange Park, FL
Gordon's Glass & Mirror
(904) 269-1941
1035 Park Ave
Green Cove Springs, FL
Black Creek Electrical Services Inc
(904) 406-8059
4230 Cr Rd 218 Ste #8
Middleburg, FL
Action Windows & Siding
(904) 276-1207
1621 Blanding Blvd Ste 102
Middleburg, FL
Black Water Construction Co
(904) 282-4428
2976 Black Creek Dr
Middleburg, FL
Gessner Garage Doors
(904) 264-5725
1405 Starboard Ct
Orange Park, FL
Black Creek Electrical
(904) 291-7941
4230 County Road 218 Ste 8
Middleburg, FL
A 1 Pick Your Part
(904) 282-0057
3044b Joe Johns Rd
Middleburg, FL
Right-Way Glass & Mirror
(904) 406-5967
4213 County Road 218 Ste 6
Middleburg, FL
Suncoast Window Repair Inc
(904) 282-2696
1673 Long Horn Rd
Middleburg, FL
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Entryway Doors

Source: BUILDING PRODUCTS Magazine
Publication date: December 28, 2006

By Jeffrey Lee

In the never-ending quest for a unique entryway that sets their home apart and adds striking curb appeal, owners of high-end homes are clamoring for doors made out of woods that don't grow in their backyard. Tropical hardwoods like mahogany, cherry, and walnut, and even rarer woods like teak and ebony, offer colors, grain patterns, and distinctive characteristics that traditional woods like fir, pine, and oak can't match.

"What's happened is that people have wanted to diversify, personalize, do different things," says John Simpson, manager of new business development for Marvin Windows and Doors. "Customers are saying, 'Got anything different?' They don't want something that looks like their parents' house."

With builders and homeowners requesting entry doors made out of everything from eucalyptus and Honduran mahogany to white zebrawood, manufacturers are delivering.

Because there are no growing seasons in the tropics, the woods tend to have an interlocking grain pattern rather than the rings common in trees from cooler climates. And builders are taking advantage of the variety of hardwoods to create entrances that wow their clients.

"We feel that the entry door is the eye of the home," says Deborah Malone, president of JP Malone Construction, a custom home builder in Scottsdale, Ariz. "It's the tell-tale sign of what's to come."

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