Double steel doors with slim profiles
The black profiles draw the eye first. They cut a clear line through the opening, yet the glass keeps the view open between hall and living room. In this interior, the double steel doors do not close off the passage; they shape it. The leaves stand partly open in some of the images, so the route from one room to the next remains visible, framed by thin metal lines and a wide, symmetrical opening.
A transparent threshold between two rooms
The strongest quality here is the way the double steel doors sit in the center of the plan without weighing it down. Glass panels carry light from one side to the other, while the slim black grid gives the opening a measured structure. From the hall, the living room reads through the panes as a sequence of bright walls, a window, and warm lighting. The result is open, but not exposed. The passage keeps its depth.
The source text notes that the client wanted extremely slim profiles. That request is visible in every view: the frames are narrow, the bars are restrained, and the door leaves avoid heavy edging. These steel doors with glass rely on proportion rather than decoration. The straight verticals and horizontals divide the panels into small rectangles, so the surface feels orderly without becoming rigid. Seen frontally, the doorway becomes almost architectural in its precision.
Measured on site, drawn for the opening
The project was not approached as a standard set of steel doors. Measurements were taken on site, then a custom design was made around the actual opening. That matters in a space like this, where the door pair sits between two white walls and has to read as part of the room rather than as an added object. The fit is what allows the opening to stay broad and balanced. Nothing feels forced into place.
From the side, the grid bars become more legible. The frame depth is slim, but the division of the glass creates a clear rhythm across the leaves. In one view the doors are fully open enough to reveal the adjoining room; in another, they sit closed and read as a transparent screen. That flexibility is part of the appeal of interior glass doors: they can hold a boundary without turning it into a wall.
Handles with a more rustic note
One of the few details that breaks the strictness of the profiles is the handle design. The text describes these as special rural-style handles, designed by the same party that made the doors. Against the black steel, the grip becomes a small but visible counterpoint. It sits lightly in the hand and visually softens the otherwise exact geometry of the leaves. The detail is modest, but it gives the composition a distinct finish.
The handle shape is easiest to notice in the closer images, where steel, glass, and the grip meet at the edge of the frame. Here the project shows its restraint. There is no excess ornament, only a few parts that need to be read clearly: the slender stile, the glass pane, the welded lines, the handle. Together they turn the opening into a carefully resolved interior element rather than a simple partition.
How the opening changes the room
Because the double steel doors stay transparent, the rooms keep a visual connection even when the leaves are closed. Light continues through the panes. Sightlines remain active. In the images, the adjacent space appears with white finishes, shelving, and warm light, so the doorway does more than connect two rooms; it gives both rooms a shared frame. That is what makes the composition feel spacious without turning the house into one undivided volume.
The black steel profiles also sharpen the contrast with the lighter surfaces around them. Against white walls and a pale floor, the doors read as a precise graphic layer. Open or closed, they keep their outline. In the open views, the leaves angle back and expose the width of the passage. In the closed views, the panes still allow the eye to travel through. The opening never goes silent.
The project shows how steel doors with slim profiles can carry a strong visual role without dominating a room. Here the profiles are not used to announce themselves; they are used to hold proportion, line up the panes, and make the transition between spaces readable. That is also why the doors suit the central position in the interior. They work as a threshold, but one with presence.
What the images make clear
The front view emphasizes symmetry. The side views show the depth of the framing and the repeated grid bars. The open angles reveal how the leaves move away from the center and leave a generous path through the opening. And in the detail shots, the meeting point of glass, black profiles, and handle shows the project at its most precise. Each image adds another reading of the same object, from room divider to passageway.
What stays with you is the relation between transparency and structure. The double steel doors let the living room remain visible from the hall, but they still give the opening a distinct frame. Their custom-made design, slim black profiles, and glass panels keep the interior connected without flattening it. It is a straightforward idea, handled with a lot of control: a doorway that opens the room, then gives it back its shape.
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