Glass Door Installation & Repair
Glass doors transform spaces with natural light and elegant design. We install and repair all types of glass doors: entry doors, French doors, patio doors, and commercial door systems, with expert craftsmanship.
A&P Glass Solutions repairs and installs glass doors across Tampa Bay. Entry doors, patio doors, French doors, and interior glass doors -- we handle it all with professional precision. Free on-site estimates.
We install and repair all types of glass doors including frameless glass entry doors, French doors with glass panels, hinged patio doors, pivot doors, barn-style sliding glass doors, and commercial glass door systems. We work with tempered safety glass for all door applications.
Our door installation process includes precise measurement, structural assessment of the opening, hardware selection, glass specification, professional installation, and thorough adjustment to ensure smooth, reliable operation. We also repair existing glass doors, replacing cracked panels, worn hardware, failing seals, and misaligned frames.
Tampa Bay homes use glass doors in a variety of configurations. French doors are popular for patios and master bedrooms. Pivot doors are showing up more often in newer Tampa homes and condo remodels because they allow wider openings. Barn-style sliding glass doors are a common interior choice for separating living spaces, home offices, or master bathrooms without the swing clearance that a hinged door requires.
Hardware selection matters on every glass door installation. We use heavy-duty hinges, closers, and fittings rated for the weight of the glass panel. Handles and pulls come in a wide range of finishes, including brushed nickel, matte black, oil-rubbed bronze, polished chrome, and satin brass. We help you select hardware that matches your existing fixtures rather than clashing with them.
Types of Glass Doors We Install and Repair
The glass doors we see most often in Tampa Bay homes and businesses fall into several categories, and each one has specific requirements for glass type, hardware, and installation method. French doors are a two-panel hinged system that opens from the center, commonly used between living rooms and patios or as master bedroom exits to a lanai. They use tempered glass inserts within a wood, fiberglass, vinyl, or aluminum frame, and the glass is typically an insulated unit on exterior applications to manage heat gain. We repair cracked French door glass, replace worn-out multipoint locking hardware, and install complete new French door systems.
Pivot doors rotate on a top-and-bottom pin set into the floor and header rather than swinging from side-mounted hinges. This allows for larger, heavier panels and creates a dramatic entrance. Pivot hardware is more complex than a standard hinge set: it includes a floor-mounted pivot socket, a top pivot or ceiling plate, and the pivot mechanism itself, which must be precisely aligned to prevent the door from binding or drifting. We install pivot doors in both frameless glass configurations and framed systems.
Barn-style glass doors run on a top-mounted rail with exposed rollers and are popular for interior applications: home offices, pantries, laundry rooms, and master bathrooms. They do not require swing clearance, which makes them practical in tight spaces. The rail hardware needs to be anchored into solid framing or a header board, not just drywall, because the full weight of the glass panel hangs from it. We mount the rail, hang the door, and adjust the rollers for smooth, quiet operation.
- French doors: two-panel hinged system for patios, lanais, and bedrooms
- Pivot doors: floor-and-header-mounted rotation for dramatic wide entries
- Barn-style sliding glass: top-rail-mounted for interior spaces without swing clearance
- Hinged patio doors: single-panel exterior doors with heavy-duty hinges
- Commercial glass entry doors: aluminum-framed tempered glass with closers and panic hardware
- Interior glass panel doors: fixed or operable glass inserts in wood or metal frames
Hardware and Finishing Options
Hardware selection is critical on glass doors because the hardware does all the structural work. Unlike a wood door where the hinges screw into a solid rail, glass door hardware clamps directly onto the glass panel or passes through precision-drilled holes. That means every piece must be sized correctly for the glass thickness and rated for the panel weight.
For frameless glass doors, we use patch fittings or point-fixed hardware that clamps the glass at specific locations, usually the top and bottom corners and along the hinge side. Patch fittings distribute the load across a wider area of the glass surface, reducing stress concentration. For heavier panels, hydraulic patch fittings include a built-in closer mechanism that controls the swing speed and holds the door at the closed position.
Handle and pull options range from simple tubular pulls to full-length ladder handles. The finish you choose should match or complement the other metal finishes in the space. If your bathroom faucets are brushed nickel, a brushed nickel door pull ties the room together. If your kitchen has matte black cabinet hardware, a matte black barn door rail and handle creates a consistent look. We carry hardware from several manufacturers and can show you options during the estimate so you are not choosing from a catalog photo.
- Patch fittings: surface-mounted clamps for frameless glass doors
- Pivot hardware: floor socket, top pivot, and pivot mechanism
- Hydraulic closers: integrated or surface-mounted for controlled closing
- Continuous hinges: full-length piano hinges for even weight distribution
- Tubular pulls, ladder handles, and D-pulls in five standard finishes
- Lock options: thumb-turn deadbolts, hook locks for sliding doors, and keyed entry hardware