A commercial garage door is only as good as how it is sized and installed. We install sectional steel, rolling steel, and high-speed doors across the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, matched to your exact opening, daily cycle volume, insulation needs, and wind-load code. From a single replacement bay to a new-construction warehouse, you get the right door, operator, and spring the first time. Call (940) 644-4376 for a free on-site quote.
The biggest difference between a door that lasts and a door that fails early is whether it was specified correctly on day one. We start by field-measuring four numbers and asking one question: how hard does this opening work?
Every install begins with the rough opening — width, height, headroom, side room, and backroom. Headroom (the space above the opening) decides whether a standard, low, or high-lift track can be used; tight headroom is exactly where a rolling steel door earns its keep, because the curtain coils into a compact barrel instead of riding back on horizontal tracks. Side room governs where the operator and spring assembly mount. Get any of these wrong and the door binds, the operator strains, or it simply will not fit.
The number that quietly drives everything else is cycle volume. One open-and-close is a cycle. A standard residential spring is rated around 10,000 cycles; a busy dock door can burn through that in well under a year. We count your realistic daily cycles and spec high-cycle springs (25,000, 50,000, or 100,000-cycle) and a duty-rated operator to match. Paying once for the right spring beats paying repeatedly for the wrong one plus the downtime around each failure.
The workhorse for warehouse and shop bays. Takes insulation well, accepts glass sections for light, and rides on horizontal tracks — the default where headroom allows.
Interlocking slats coil into an overhead barrel. The answer for tight headroom, alley docks, security grilles, and storefronts where there is no room for sectional tracks.
Fabric or rigid doors that open several feet per second. Built for cold storage, clean rooms, and high-traffic drive-through bays where every cycle costs time and conditioned air.
DFW heat, sudden storms, and the state wind-load map all push specific choices on a commercial install. Here is what we weigh before ordering your door.
For a heated or cooled bay we spec an insulated sandwich-panel door, typically R-12 to R-18, with tight perimeter and bottom seals. A poly-core door cuts radiant heat in a Texas summer and keeps cold storage and conditioned shops far easier to hold at temperature.
Large commercial openings act like sails in a storm. We build to the wind-load class your opening and location call for — reinforced sections, heavier struts, and proper anchoring — so the door stays in its tracks when a North Texas front rolls through.
The door and the operator are one system. We match a jackshaft, trolley, or high-cycle hoist operator to the door weight, the mounting room, and the cycle count, then wire in the photo-eyes, edge sensors, and controls the bay needs.
We work from your GC's rough-opening dimensions and jamb prep, scheduling the install so the bay is weather-tight when you need it — not holding up the trades behind us.
Swapping an existing door, we reuse sound structure, flag any rot or out-of-square jamb before it bites, and haul off the old door and hardware when we are done.
Stock sectional and rolling-steel sizes often go in within a week or two. Custom widths, heavy wind-load builds, and special colors are factory-ordered — and we tell you the real date up front.
We install it, we service it. The same crew that hangs your door handles the maintenance and any repair down the road — no finger-pointing between vendors.
We field-measure the rough opening width and height, the headroom above it, the side room on each jamb, and the backroom depth into the building. Those four numbers, plus your daily cycle count and whether the bay is conditioned, decide the door type and the spring and operator that go with it. We bring the measurements to you at no charge.
Sectional steel suits most warehouse and shop bays and takes insulation well. Rolling steel coils into a small overhead barrel, so it wins where headroom or side room is tight, like alley docks and storefront grilles. High-speed fabric or rigid doors open several feet per second for cold storage and busy drive-through bays where every open-close cycle costs time.
Yes. We install on new construction and on tenant build-outs, coordinating rough-opening dimensions and jamb prep with your GC before the door arrives. We also do straight replacements on existing openings, reusing the structure where it is sound and flagging anything that needs work first.
In the DFW climate we usually spec an insulated sandwich-panel door in the R-12 to R-18 range for heated or cooled space, paired with good perimeter and bottom seals. A poly-core door cuts radiant heat load in a Texas summer and keeps a conditioned shop or cold-storage room far easier to hold at temperature.
Stock sectional and rolling-steel sizes can often be installed within one to two weeks. Custom widths, heavy wind-load builds, and special colors or glass run longer because they are factory-ordered. We give you a real lead time with the quote so you can plan the bay around it.
One call gets a commercial tech on-site to measure your opening and quote the right door, operator, and spring — no guesswork, no surprises. Free estimate, same price 24/7.