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Composite Doors Buckhurst Hill

There are many manufacturers producing perfectly adequate composite doors but, is ‘adequate’ good enough or would you prefer a solid wood composite door by Solidor? These are very serious questions that need to be addressed when choosing your new door. The definition of a composite door, is a door made up of several materials to produce a single item. This is commonly a GRP skin covering a central core of insulating foam or in the case of Solidor, solid wood.

At first glance, they may all look the same. It’s not until you delve a little deeper that you understand the superior build quality of a Solidor product. Using a solid wood core makes a heavier, more solid, more secure door that is virtually impenetrable and has a low maintenance thermo-plastic skin that is guaranteed against flaking and fading for 10 years.

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Composite Doors in Buckhurst Hill,
East London & Surrounding Counties

Composite doors are available in a choice of elegant styles, colours and glass including side panels and windows above the composite door. Any double or triple glazed panels are A-rated, meaning our composite external doors excel in thermal efficiency too.

grey door set
Guide to Our

Composite Doors

Strong – the primary concern for home owners is to protect his or her property inside the house. Composite doors are built using the latest technology that makes them strong and reliable to protect your property inside the house. They can withstand impact and even survive heavy winds and storms.

Durable – it is expensive to replace doors every year. A weak door will leave you jittery whenever you are away. You cannot sleep peacefully at night for fear of buglers. Composite roofs will live through the life of your property. This saves you the resources you would need to replace the doors.

Thermal efficiency – composite doors maintain constant internal temperatures and conditions. Engineers ensure that the doors keep heat inside during the cold season and prevent entry of solar heat during summer. This ensures that your air conditioning system is not overworked.

Solidor Composite Doors Buckhurst Hill

Composite doors Buckhurst Hill. Choose from our extensive range of solid wood composite door styles and colours to perfectly match your vision, at a cost to suit every budget. Made from a solid wood inner core, Solidor composite doors offer the ultimate in style & security.

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ultion £1000 guarantee

Ultion Multi-point locking system

Every Solidor composite doors is fitted with an Ultion locking system that offers unrivaled security. Multiple locking points on every door makes it virtually impenetrable. Impervious to lock snapping or bumping, the Ultion locking system really is the ultimate in door security, that also offers a £1000 guarantee.

Facts about Buckhurst Hill

History

The first mention of Buckhurst Hill is in 1135, when reference was made to “La Bocherste”, becoming in later years “Bucket Hill”, originally meaning a hill covered with beech trees.[2] It lay in Epping Forest and consisted of only a few scattered houses along the ancient road from Woodford to Loughton.

Before the building of the railways, Buckhurst Hill was on the stagecoach route between London and Cambridge, Norwich, Bury St Edmunds and Dunmow. Originally it was a part of the parish of Chigwell; there was no road connecting the two communities and in order to get to church, parishioners had to ford the River Roding at Woodford.[3] The Parish Church of St John was built in 1838 as a chapel of ease but Buckhurst Hill did not become a separate ecclesiastical parish until 1867.[4] St John’s National School was also built in 1838.

General Info

Buckhurst Hill is a town in the Epping Forest district of Essex, England. Part of the metropolitan area of London and the Greater London Urban Area, it is adjacent to the northern boundary of the London Borough of Redbridge, around 10 miles (16 km) north-east of Charing Cross. The area developed following the opening of a railway line in 1856, originally part of the Eastern Counties Railway and now on the Central line of the London Underground.

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