Haas Door Company has been manufacturing top quality garage doors in Northwest Ohio since 1954. We are locally owned, and our products exhibit unsurpassed quality and workmanship. When you employ quality people, and they utilize quality manufacturing processes, you produce quality products. We call ourselves “The Haas Door Family” and that’s the way we operate.
We manufacture doors crafted of aluminum or steel, featuring a wide range of R-values. Our doors keep noise, weather and intruders out of your home or business. We even offer certified wind load options up to 200 mph.
Featured Products
Haas Door Offers Fully Custom Window Placements on Garage Doors
Doors & Windows
New SelectView tool allows users to create staggered, vertical, or all-over window placements.
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Personalized closets: Tips for creating clients' dream closet
A jumbled closet, where items are hard to locate and clean clothes are indistinguishable from dirty, can be a major disruption in the lives of homeowners trying to prepare for their busy days.Bill Haas, a global product merchant with The Expo Design Center based in Atlanta, notes that homeowners are more conscious of wasted space.
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13 Show-Stopping IBS and KBIS Debuts
Headed to Design and Construction Week in January? Don't miss these 13 new products.
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Paint It Green
As federal and state governments try to get a handle on the pollution problem and the impact of "volatile organic compounds," or VOCs, they're turning their attention to paint. A cascade of regulations, moving from the EPA down through regional commissions and finally taking effect at the state level, is putting the squeeze on suppliers to reduce the solvent content of all paint, stain, and primer formulas — or else take the products off the market. Paint makers are staying ahead of the curve. After years of adjusting to California requirements, most suppliers can now provide low-VOC products that come close to matching the performance of the old solvent-borne formulations. But a close match isn't a perfect substitute — and therein lies the rub. For contractors in the field, reports Ted Cushman, the new formulas may call for some changes in the way they choose, handle, and apply their products.
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