DoorHub

Avoiding Costly Door Specification Errors in Large UAE Developments: A Practical Guide by Doorhub

In large-scale construction projects across the UAE, door packages are often finalized under time pressure—after layouts are fixed, finishes approved, and budgets locked. While doors may appear straightforward, they are among the most technically sensitive elements in any building.

At Doorhub, we frequently see the same issues repeated across residential towers, hotels, offices, and mixed-use developments. These issues rarely stem from poor products; instead, they originate from early-stage specification decisions that didn’t account for real usage, compliance, or long-term performance.

This guide outlines the most common door specification errors seen in large UAE projects—and explains how developers and contractors can avoid them before they impact approvals, handover timelines, or operational costs.

 

Why Door Specifications Fail in Large Projects

 

Direct answer: Because doors sit between multiple disciplines and are rarely coordinated early.

Door specifications intersect with:

Architecture and finishes

Fire and life safety requirements

Hardware and access control

Acoustic and comfort expectations

When door decisions are postponed or copied from generic BOQs, inconsistencies appear later—often on site or during authority inspections.

 

Error 1: Specifying Doors Without Usage Zoning

 

The issue

Doors are specified uniformly across the project.

 

Why it matters

A door used 20 times a day behaves very differently from one used 300 times a day. When usage intensity is ignored:

Hinges fail prematurely

Door leaves lose alignment

Closers stop functioning correctly

 

How to avoid it

Divide door specifications into usage zones, such as:

Low-traffic residential interiors

High-traffic commercial corridors

Service and back-of-house areas

Each zone should have a clearly defined door construction standard.

 

Error 2: Overlooking Core Construction in Early Stages

 

The issue

Specifications focus on finish and appearance only.

 

Why it matters

The internal core governs:

Structural rigidity

Sound insulation

Resistance to climate-related movement

In UAE conditions, inappropriate core choices often result in warping, hollow sound transmission, and reduced lifespan.

 

How to avoid it

Specify core types based on performance, not cost alone:

Reinforced or solid cores for high-use areas

Moisture-resistant cores for humid zones

Acoustic-grade cores where privacy is required

 

Error 3: Selecting Door Thickness Without Performance Criteria

 

The issue

Thickness is chosen as a standard dimension rather than a performance tool.

 

Why it matters

Door thickness affects:

Stability under heavy hardware

Acoustic performance

Fire and access control compatibility

Thin doors may meet initial budgets but often fail under commercial usage.

 

How to avoid it

For large UAE projects:

Treat 48mm as the minimum for most commercial interiors

Use thicker doors where acoustics, fire rating, or heavy hardware are involved

Thickness should reflect operational demands, not just drawings.

 

Error 4: Incomplete Fire Door Specifications

 

The issue

Fire doors are treated as individual components, not systems.

 

Why it matters

Fire-rated performance depends on the door leaf, frame, seals, and hardware working together. If any element is incorrect:

Certification becomes invalid

Inspections fail

Replacement becomes unavoidable

 

How to avoid it

Ensure fire doors are:

Specified as complete tested assemblies

Matched with approved hardware

Installed without unauthorized modifications

Early coordination with suppliers prevents last-minute compliance issues.

 

Error 5: Addressing Acoustic Performance Too Late

 

The issue

Acoustics are only discussed after user complaints.

 

Why it matters

Noise transfer is one of the most common post-handover complaints in:

Hotels

Offices

Mixed-use developments

Once walls and doors are installed, acoustic upgrades become expensive and disruptive.

 

How to avoid it

Identify sound-sensitive areas during design:

Guest rooms

Meeting spaces

Executive offices

Specify acoustic door systems from the outset, including seals and appropriate construction.

 

Error 6: Separating Door and Hardware Decisions

 

The issue

Doors and hardware are procured independently.

 

Why it matters

Mismatch between door weight and hardware capacity leads to:

Hinge deformation

Door closer failure

Poor operational performance

These issues often surface within months of handover.

 

How to avoid it

Specify doors and hardware as integrated systems, considering:

Door mass

Frequency of use

Access control or automation needs

This reduces maintenance and extends service life.

 

Error 7: Ignoring UAE Climate and Building Conditions

 

The issue

Specifications are copied from international standards without adaptation.

 

Why it matters

UAE buildings experience:

Continuous air-conditioning

Humidity variation

Temperature cycling

Doors not designed for these conditions show premature deterioration.

 

How to avoid it

Select door constructions proven to perform in regional conditions, with:

Stable materials

Moisture-resistant components

Controlled expansion behavior

 

Error 8: Late Door Package Finalization

 

The issue

Door details are finalized after ceilings, walls, and services.

 

Why it matters

Late decisions cause:

Frame alignment conflicts

Ceiling coordination issues

Limited hardware options

This leads to rushed compromises and installation challenges.

 

How to avoid it

Include door systems in early coordination alongside:

Ceiling details

Wall build-ups

Access and security planning

 

Doorhub’s Approach to Smarter Door Specification

 

At Doorhub, we support developers and contractors by:

Reviewing door schedules early

Aligning door construction with real usage

Coordinating doors, frames, and hardware

Advising on compliance and long-term performance

Our focus is not just supplying doors—but ensuring they perform reliably throughout the building’s lifecycle.

 

Final Thought: Doors Are Operational Assets, Not Finishes

 

In large UAE developments, doors are among the most used components in the building. Poor specification decisions rarely fail immediately—but they almost always fail eventually.

By approaching door selection as a technical and operational decision, developers and contractors can reduce risk, control maintenance costs, and deliver better-performing buildings.

Early planning saves more than late fixes ever will.

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