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Jim Austin - 715-323-3588
Managing Director, Targeted Content Inc.

Mike Schweiss - 507-426-8273
Owner, Schweiss Doors





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Images (from left): HiddenHoustonDoor1.jpg; HiddenHoustonDoor2.jpg; HiddenHoustonDoor3.jpg; HiddenHoustonDoor4.jpg; HiddenHoustonDoor5.jpg; HiddenHoustonDoor6.jpg (PHOTO CAPTIONS available at end of article.)

Where’s the Garage?
Texas homeowner’s bifold garage door is hidden beneath matching siding
FAIRFAX, Minn., June 3, 2020 – Now you see it. Now you don’t.

A vanishing garage door is what Wayne Braun wanted and the Houston homeowner is more than satisfied with his 21-foot by 10-foot bifold liftstrap door from Schweiss Doors.

“The door is hidden under the siding, matching the rest of the house,” says Braun, who recently retired as the Principal in Charge of Design for PDR Corporation in Houston. “I had a local metal fabricator make a continuous steel metal plate bracket to ‘cradle’ the siding system along both vertical edges and welded it to the doorframe. This allowed us to extend the siding beyond the width of the door to align with the corners of the house. Using cabinetry terminology, the door is designed as a ‘flush overlay door’ and gives very few clues as to its existence and how it might work.”

The bifold liftstrap designer door on Braun’s two-car garage is equipped with an automatic latch system, electric photo eye sensors and remote opener.

I first learned about Schweiss Doors years ago when I was working at PDR,” Braun says. “We had a project for a major corporation, building a new wellness facility and they are going to do an indoor swimming pool. The client asked whether a big door could be put on the back end of the swimming pool to give it the option of making it open-air when the weather was accommodating. I started doing some Internet research and came across Schweiss Doors. The product stuck with me. When I designed my new home, I decided I didn’t want to put a big ugly garage door on the face of my house. And so, I recalled that I could do a hidden garage door using a Schweiss Bifold Door System.”

To conceal the garage door, he placed weather-treated 1x4s on the top of the steel door framing and then a layer of ½-inch marine-grade plywood. On top of that he used the same vapor barrier that was used on the house. The siding was then screwed to the plywood.

“I like the uniqueness of the door and the quality of the manufacturing,” Braun says. “The way it is designed and engineered; it has the capacity to carry the weight of the siding on the face of it without me having to do anything else special to it. The liftstraps are fantastic. A point to be made with the way the bifold works is I get 100 percent of the overhead lights in the best place, whether open or closed.”

Braun says technical support at Schweiss Doors was very helpful in providing the detail he needed along with electrical information needed. To help with the design, Schweiss offered up some images of other doors on its website that were designed to be hidden or semi-hidden.

“I’ll tell you, everyone who has seen the house for the first time asks, ‘Where is your garage?’” Braun says. “They are kind of shocked when I tell them the garage is actually under the siding.”

The door was installed by Hangar Rental Inc. of Brookshire, Texas, a company that has installed hundreds of bifold and hydraulic doors and stands by the quality and ease of installation of the Schweiss doors.

“If I get a phone call from a gentleman who’s thinking about building a hangar, I ask him, ‘What are your door needs? What are you looking for?’ Let’s talk about the best products on the market,” says Oscar Stout, installer for Hangar Rental. “The first words out of my mouth are always Schweiss Doors. The second words out of my mouth are Schweiss Doors, because we start talking about the hydraulic door, then we go to the bifold. Nothing beats the strap system, period. I’ve got a little bit of engineering background: the liftstraps are bulletproof. The safety and reliability of them, the fact that they are effectively maintenance-free as long as somebody doesn’t cut them or expose them to harsh chemicals; it’s a phenomenal way to go.”

Schweiss Doors is the premier manufacturer of hydraulic and bifold liftstrap doors. Doors are custom made to any size for any type of new or existing building for architects and builders determined to do amazing things with their buildings, including the doors. Schweiss also offers a cable to liftstrap conversion package. For more information, visit www.bifold.com.

Photo Captions:

HiddenHoustonDoor1: Wayne Braun of Houston, Texas, is pleased with his 21-foot by 10-foot Schweiss bifold two-car garage door. The way it was installed makes it nearly invisible from the outside as it blends in with the matching siding on his modular home.

HiddenHoustonDoor2: When closed, the door cladding on the outside of Braun’s “flush overlay” bifold door gives the appearance of a one-piece door.

HiddenHoustonDoor3: A continuous steel plate bracket cradled the siding system along both vertical edges allowing the siding to extend beyond the width of the door.

HiddenHoustonDoor4: The bifold door can be stopped at any level. It has an automatic latching system, photo eye sensors and remote opener.

HiddenHoustonDoor5: When open, the bifold liftstrap door offers a nice shaded canopy and doesn’t take away from the headroom inside the garage.

HiddenHoustonDoor6: Braun’s home is comprised of six modules. People seeing it for the first time often ask “Where’s the garage?”