Door Styles for Homes in Sterling Heights, MI

Located in Macomb County, Sterling Heights is one of Detroit’s primary suburbs. Its residents enjoy beautiful homes with quality interior doors and exterior doors.

Home & Door Products supplies a wide range of French doors and sliding patio doors to homeowners in this suburb. Their expert technicians provide superior service that exceeds expectations.

Traditional

Traditional doors feature ornate details and raised panels that come in a variety of finishes. This style of door is a popular choice for homeowners who are looking to add curb appeal to their home and complement the classic architecture of many historic houses in Sterling Heights, MI, such as the Upton House Museum. If you own a traditional-style home and want to reduce your energy bills, Kosin’s is ready to help you find the right new windows for it. Windows that aren’t properly fitted let too much heat escape outdoors in winter, and too much indoors in summer, resulting in high energy bills.

Modern

This home features tasteful updates from top to bottom, along with exceptional features and a prime location in Sterling Heights. Prepare gourmet meals in your spacious kitchen, complete with custom granite countertops and a stunning backsplash. Spend evenings by the fire in the inviting living room, featuring a gorgeous gas fireplace and captivating stone surround.

An interior designer can help you hone your style into a functional design, manage your renovation project, and provide visuals to get a feel for how your space will look. They have a formal education in interior design and offer a comprehensive approach to renovations. Home decorators, on the other hand, have a less extensive formal education and specialize in surface-level aesthetics like paint colors and furniture.

Search for a professional in your area on Houzz. Narrow your search by completing the form below and describing what you’re looking for. You can also browse portfolios to see what styles of designs different contractors have created and contact them directly.

Craftsman

Craftsman style homes emerged at the turn of the 20th Century heavily inspired by the arts and crafts movement. They emphasize the beauty of natural materials and hand-worked construction. They typically have a small footprint with only one or two stories and an understated exterior with exposed rafters and wood trim.

Inside, Craftsman homes are cozy, homey, and unpretentious. They often feature distinct living and dining spaces; eat-in kitchen nooks; a prominent fireplace (or two); and a traditional, human-scaled space plan. They also have thick wood framed doors and windows, built-in bookshelves and window seats, boxed beams along the ceiling, and hardwood floors.

Because craftsman homes prioritize natural materials, they’re a great fit for picture windows and glass door options. Fiberglass doors with inlaid panels can add a textural differentiation that ties into the wooden rafters and brackets seen on many Craftsman home front facades.

Prairie

When most people think of prairies, they envision the flat grasslands with few trees that were once the defining landscape of the Midwest. This nearly treeless ecosystem is part of the broader temperate grasslands, savannas and shrublands biome.

Prairies are home to hundreds of animal and plant species, from bison and prairie dogs to grouse and sunflowers. They are also very fertile places, thanks to the long, deep roots of tallgrass plants. These roots keep the soil from washing away, and when they die, bacteria and fungi break them down, adding organic matter to the ground.

Today, prairie remnants are mainly found in areas where they have been repeatedly burned, such as on old railroad rights of way or in cemetaries. These burnt-out areas still have the tallgrass character that made prairies so unique. They also have the benefit of reducing fire risk to surrounding forests. In some cases, a restored prairie looks as though it was there before white settlement, but others are barely recognizable as grasslands.