Specifying door hardware is far more complex than selecting hinges and locks. In this episode, Dave Stutzman, Steve Gantner, and Elias Saltz unpack the coordination, technical decisions, and collaboration required to design building openings that are secure, code-compliant, functional, and maintainable. From lock types and closers to electronic access control and owner standards, they explain why door hardware touches many disciplines on a project. The conversation also highlights why successful hardware specifications begin with early planning, clear operational intent, and close coordination between architects, security consultants, owners, manufacturers, and hardware specialists.
Door hardware is one of the most interdisciplinary components of a building, requiring coordination between architecture, interiors, security, operations, code compliance, and manufacturers. Success depends on aligning these perspectives before products are selected.
Define the function first, then specify the hardware. Establish security goals, owner standards, and operational requirements early, allowing hardware specialists to coordinate compatible solutions during construction documents.
Understanding door hardware requires more than product knowledge. Specifiers must develop fluency in life safety, accessibility, security, and building operations to make informed decisions that impact the entire project lifecycle.
Bringing owners, architects, security consultants, and hardware manufacturers together earlier in design can reduce coordination issues, improve constructability, and deliver more reliable access control systems.
Project teams communicate more effectively when they describe how a door should perform rather than prescribing individual hardware products. Focusing on intent creates flexibility while maintaining project goals.
The best door hardware solutions are built on collaboration. Early conversations and shared decision-making between disciplines create better outcomes than isolated product selection, reinforcing the value of trust and cross-functional expertise.
Don't specify the hardware. Specify what the door needs to do.