Roswell Historic District (1840s–1900s). Greek Revival, antebellum, and Victorian homes around Bulloch Hall, Smith Plantation, and the Square — most have detached carriage-house garages or single-bay attached garages with low headroom. The right door here is recessed-panel or carriage-style, ideally carriage-style in solid black or bronze, or Wayne Dalton 9700 Series for stained-wood looks. Track and torsion-spring fits get tighter in low-headroom situations — we do the measurement in person, not over the phone.
Mid-century estates (1960s–1980s) in Martins Landing, Country Club of Roswell, and Willow Springs are split-foyer ranches and traditionals with two-car attached doubles. Most original doors from this era are now 35–55 years old and well past spring, cable, and opener end-of-life — the standard Roswell repair call comes from these neighborhoods. Replacement spec usually goes to insulated steel: recessed-panel in Bronze or Walnut, with Madison or Stockton windows for character.
1990s–2010s subdivisions across the Holcomb Bridge corridor and Big Creek are 2,500–4,500 sq ft homes with 16- and 18-foot doubles. Standard fix-and-install patterns: first-cycle spring failures hitting their cycle limit now, plus opener end-of-life on 2000s LiftMasters. carriage-style 21 or Wayne Dalton 9700 is the most common upgrade install we do here.
2010s+ teardown rebuilds in Crabapple and the River Club trend toward custom builds with 18-, 20-, and even 24-foot triple bays. wood-look composite doors, modern aluminum-glass and Modern flush-panel, and high-end LiftMaster Elite jackshaft openers with myQ are standard equipment. We measure in-person, recommend by architecture, and ship custom-paint to match existing trim.