Period and listed properties present a specific set of challenges for anyone commissioning bespoke internal doors, and the challenges are different in character from those that apply to new-build or contemporary renovation projects. The building has a history, a material logic, and in the case of listed properties, legal protections that constrain what can be done and how. Getting bespoke internal doors right in this context requires understanding all three dimensions before briefing anyone to make anything.
Understanding the Building Before Specifying the Door
The starting point for any bespoke internal door commission in a period property is a thorough understanding of what the building is and what it contains. This sounds obvious, and in practice it’s the step that gets rushed most often.
Period buildings are rarely as uniform as they appear from a plan. Victorian and Edwardian terraces often have different floor levels between the front and rear of the house due to ground conditions or later additions. Georgian properties may have original door frames that are out of square in ways that accumulated over two centuries of building movement. Pre-war properties frequently have original frames with profiles that no longer appear in standard joinery sections and that will need to be measured and matched precisely if new doors are to sit in them correctly.
Before a manufacturer can produce bespoke internal doors that will perform correctly in a period property, they need actual survey dimensions rather than assumed ones. This means measuring each opening individually, checking for plumb and square, and understanding the relationship between the door, its frame, the wall thickness, and the floor finish. In properties where the floors have been built up with successive generations of floor covering, the nominal door height from the original opening may be significantly less than the frame height would suggest. The difference matters.
The Listed Building Dimension
For listed buildings specifically, the requirement to obtain listed building consent before making alterations that affect the character of the building introduces a layer that most other projects don’t have. Internal doors are not automatically outside the scope of listed building consent. In buildings listed at Grade I or Grade II*, the interior is protected in the same way as the exterior, and replacing original internal doors with new ones, even with bespoke replicas, may require consent. In Grade II listed buildings, the position is less clear-cut and depends significantly on what the local heritage officer considers material to the significance of the building.
The sensible approach is to engage with the local authority’s listed building officer before commissioning anything. This is not bureaucratic caution; it’s the practical step that prevents expensive work being undertaken that subsequently requires removal or modification. Heritage officers are often genuinely helpful when approached early in a project, and the conversation about what is and isn’t acceptable is more productive before designs are finalised than after.
Where consent is required, the brief for bespoke internal doors needs to incorporate the requirements of the consent. Replication of original door designs, specified timber species, traditional jointing methods, and period-appropriate hardware may all be conditions of consent rather than just design preferences.
Matching Original Joinery
The primary design challenge in most period property internal door commissions is matching the character of surviving original joinery while meeting the functional requirements of contemporary use. This is a more specific challenge than it might appear.
Original timber used in period properties, particularly in buildings from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, was often old-growth timber with a density and grain structure that isn’t replicated in commercially available modern timber. The way old-growth softwood takes paint, holds detail, and ages is different from modern plantation-grown equivalents. Where an exact material match is required, salvaged period timber is sometimes the answer, though sourcing it in sufficient quantity and appropriate specification is itself a project.
More commonly, the approach is to use the best available modern equivalent of the original species, matched as closely as possible in cut and density, and accept that the new doors will age differently from the originals while being as close as possible in character. This approach works well when the new doors are replacing missing or severely damaged originals rather than sitting alongside surviving ones, where the comparison is direct and unavoidable.
Moulding profiles are another area where matching original joinery requires specific capability. Period panel mouldings, particularly from Georgian and early Victorian buildings, were produced with hand planes to profiles that aren’t in standard router bit catalogues. Reproducing them requires either custom-ground cutters or hand work, and the manufacturer needs to understand the profile from physical templates taken from the surviving joinery rather than from drawings alone.
Hardware and How It Interacts With Bespoke Internal Doors
Hardware selection for period properties deserves more attention than it often receives in the briefing process. The original hardware in a period property, where it survives, represents a specific period of manufacture and a specific quality of casting or forging that is difficult to replicate exactly. Period-appropriate reproduction hardware exists across a range of quality levels, and the difference between the best and the acceptable is significant when the hardware is sitting on a door that has been made to a high standard.
For listed buildings where original hardware survives, the question of whether to reuse original hardware on new doors, source period reproduction hardware, or specify contemporary hardware that works stylistically without attempting to replicate the period is one worth resolving explicitly in the design brief rather than leaving to late-stage decisions. Each approach has implications for the door design itself, particularly around the preparation for mortise locks and the relationship between handle backplate dimensions and door stile proportions.
Lead Times and the Logistics of Period Property Work
Bespoke internal doors for period properties typically require longer lead times than straightforward bespoke commissions, for several reasons. Survey, specification, and sample approval take longer when heritage conditions are in play. Listed building consent, if required, adds a statutory period. Sourcing matched timber or custom-ground moulding profiles takes time that standard procurement doesn’t.
The additional complication in occupied period properties is that installation disruption needs to be managed more carefully than in new-build or vacant renovation projects. Existing architraves and trim may be fragile or irreplaceable, and installation sequencing needs to protect them. The bespoke door manufacturer and the installation team need to have a shared understanding of what they’re working with before work begins.
Period properties reward patience in this process. The quality and authenticity of bespoke internal doors that have been properly researched, specified, and made to the character of the building is the result of taking the time that the work requires.
