our CULTURE
Whether you're looking for custom wood cabinets, doors, or windows, our team is dedicated to providing high-quality solutions that exceed expectations. Browse our videos to see us in action and discover how we can help bring your design vision to life.
MANUFACTURING MARVELS As seen on Fox Business
PROJECT SHOWCASE HL Stearns Building
We’re known for our windows, doors, and cabinetry, but our truly Versatile team can take on all manner of architectural woodwork. We were excited to take part in this stylish, modern office space buildout for the HL Stearns headquarters . We created an eye-catching logo wall and reception desk, as well as rustic wood paneling throughout. Interior storefronts include large format sliding barn door panels clad in paneling to match the walls, and full-lite interior passage doors are paired with direct-glaze sidelites.
Both the event kitchen and kitchenette feature sleek full-overlay cabinetry in stain-grade oak, with dovetail bamboo drawer boxes and plenty of pullout accessories. Solid white oak floating shelves, benches, and a handmade maple butcher block counter at the custom rolling island complete the event kitchen. Kitchens in commercial spaces can have high demands placed on them: we make it a point to choose the best materials for the project, ensuring lasting beauty and performance.
We take pride in our range of capabilities, and this project showcases some especially unique elements that we are excited to share with you. We are grateful to our collaborators and partners in this project: CD Redding Construction, Works Progress Architecture, and of course the team at HL Stearns.
Some things can’t be rushed, and that describes the latest chapter of the story about the historic restoration of Portland’s Hallock and McMillan Building. Built in 1857 by Abasolom Hallock, the city’s first architect, the Hallock-McMillan is Portland’s oldest brick and cast iron commercial building.
Portland developer and building owner John Russell bought the Hallock-McMillan in 2010, with a plan to return the building to its 1857 appearance. In 2011, John commissioned Wave One Films to document the first chapter of the building’s restoration: recreating patterns of the building’s original cast iron design pieces, and then, the sand casting process, where molten iron is poured into sand molds.
After the pour, the story went dark.
But the restoration continued in early 2019, and the next chapter of the Hallock-McMillan story: the restoration of the building’s brick facade was told. We are pleased to be a part of this project by providing historically-accurate craftsmanship for all the doors, storefronts and windows.New Paragraph
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