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#1
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Hi,
I'm framing a laundry closet in the basement for side-by-side washer and dryer. The doorway I made is 72" wide. My first thought was to install two 3ft wide bifold doors (one on either side). A neighbor suggested a pair of french doors (each 3ft wide). His thought is that bifolds get a bit wonky over time and a set of french doors (no glass panels) would be sturdier. I have the swing space in front of this closet for either type, so that's no concern. Does anyone have a strong pro or con on either type of door based on experience? Or is this just a subjective decision? Thanks Theodore |
#2
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#3
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#4
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#5
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Bifolds are a pain in the rear to keep working.
Maybe if you have no kids and are ultra careful they'd be okay. Bang them once with the laundry basket and they're toast. I'd go with the French. Unless..........do you have room for a pocket? Best of all worlds. Do you really need a door? In a basement? |
#6
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On 04/04/2017 12:30 PM, Gordon Shumway wrote:
[snip] The other choice would be no doors at all. That would eliminate all hassle when doing the laundry… except that of doing the laundry itself. That would be my choice. My laundry closet is similar to the OP's, with bifold doors. I removed them since they did little but get in the way. I have no need to hide the fact that I have a washer and dryer. BTW, for similar reasons, I have no doors on the kitchen cabinets. -- Mark Lloyd http://notstupid.us/ "Would raise a glass of champagne, but I don't drink... won't thank the great Mojo since I'm an atheist. But there's always chocolate." [J. Michael Straczynski] |
#7
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On 4/4/2017 3:39 PM, Mark Lloyd wrote:
My laundry closet is similar to the OP's, with bifold doors. I removed them since they did little but get in the way. I have no need to hide the fact that I have a washer and dryer. BTW, for similar reasons, I have no doors on the kitchen cabinets. Ick. We cook in our kitchen and cooking releases moisture, grease, other potential contaminants. I prefer to keep out food and dishes as clean as possible. |
#8
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#9
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On Tue, 4 Apr 2017 18:52:26 -0400, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
On 4/4/2017 3:39 PM, Mark Lloyd wrote: My laundry closet is similar to the OP's, with bifold doors. I removed them since they did little but get in the way. I have no need to hide the fact that I have a washer and dryer. BTW, for similar reasons, I have no doors on the kitchen cabinets. Ick. We cook in our kitchen and cooking releases moisture, grease, other potential contaminants. I prefer to keep out food and dishes as clean as possible. Maybe Mark doesn't have curtains or shades on his windows either? |
#10
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On Tue, 4 Apr 2017 18:06:09 -0500, Dean Hoffman
wrote: Accordian door maybe? They get wonky too, not very sturdy? |
#11
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On Tue, 4 Apr 2017 11:57:08 -0700 (PDT), TimR
wrote: I'd go with the French. Unless..........do you have room for a pocket? Best of all worlds. Pocket doors are good until they aren't. If the rail or rollers fail it can be a pain to fix inside a wall. OP would need double doors to span the space. Leaving the space open may be the easiest approach. |
#12
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On 4/4/17 6:46 PM, Oren wrote:
On Tue, 4 Apr 2017 18:06:09 -0500, Dean Hoffman wrote: Accordian door maybe? They get wonky too, not very sturdy? The ones in my world probably would. Look at these from Menards: https://www.menards.com/main/doors-windows-millwork/folding-doors/c-7573.htm I'd think $2900 would buy something a bit solid. |
#13
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On Tue, 4 Apr 2017 20:14:20 -0500, Dean Hoffman wrote:
On 4/4/17 6:46 PM, Oren wrote: On Tue, 4 Apr 2017 18:06:09 -0500, Dean Hoffman wrote: Accordian door maybe? They get wonky too, not very sturdy? The ones in my world probably would. Look at these from Menards: https://www.menards.com/main/doors-windows-millwork/folding-doors/c-7573.htm I'd think $2900 would buy something a bit solid. But, but, but the OP's opening is 72" so that would be a special order at about 4-5K. |
#14
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These are all great suggestions and valid opinions. Thank you all very much.
Basement will ultimately be finished, so I do need some doors on this; and pocket doors not practical (but good suggestion). Given that two french doors will need to be WIDE open each time, I think I'll go for the bifolds just to better manage the space fronting this area. |
#15
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OK - Now go for the hardware that will allow them to be open as far wide as is possible. You might be able to get some hinges that have sort of an offset to allow the doors when open to not intrude on the available width. Badly explained but you8 probably should understand what I am trying to say.
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#16
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On Tue, 4 Apr 2017 20:14:20 -0500, Dean Hoffman
wrote: Accordian door maybe? They get wonky too, not very sturdy? The ones in my world probably would. Look at these from Menards: https://www.menards.com/main/doors-windows-millwork/folding-doors/c-7573.htm I'd think $2900 would buy something a bit solid. Wow. They sure have improved over the last half century :-) |
#17
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#18
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On Tue, 4 Apr 2017 11:57:08 -0700 (PDT), TimR
wrote: Bifolds are a pain in the rear to keep working. Maybe if you have no kids and are ultra careful they'd be okay. Bang them once with the laundry basket and they're toast. I'd go with the French. Unless..........do you have room for a pocket? Best of all worlds. Do you really need a door? In a basement? Of course he does. High-class people don't get dirty, they don't even sweat, and they don't even have a washing machine. Letting people see that you have one is the same as saying "I'm low-class." |
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