We Ordered a Custom Front Door in the Philippines — and It Took Down Our Wall

We Ordered a Custom Front Door in the Philippines — and It Took Down Our Wall
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“Just replacing a door” — you wouldn’t expect that to involve demolishing your wall, right?

Apparently in the Philippines, this is completely normal. Nobody told us.


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Why We Decided to Replace the Door

Our house was brand new — completed in June 2025. The front door was equally new: solid mahogany, sturdy and beautiful.

Or so we thought.

We completely underestimated the Philippine climate.

During dry season, the wood dried out and cracked. During rainy season, it absorbed moisture and swelled. Repeat. Eventually, opening and closing the door became a serious workout.

Mahogany is a fine wood, but the problem was that it hadn’t been properly cured (kiln-dried) before use. Insufficiently dried lumber is prone to exactly this kind of warping and cracking — even in a brand-new house.

Since my husband Ryan and I are about as far from DIY-types as you can get (we don’t even own a saw), Ryan came up with a creative solution: he started shaving the door with an old kitchen knife.

A grown man. Scraping a door. With a cleaver. It was oddly cinematic.

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We kept managing like this until one morning — the day we had to leave for a friend’s wedding where we were invited as godparents. Two nights away. We were all packed and ready to go when:

The lock wouldn’t close.

The door itself shut fine. But it had swollen so much that the latch and strike plate no longer aligned. No matter how many times we tried, it just wouldn’t catch. The clock was ticking.

We left the house unlocked.

Nothing valuable was inside, but that did absolutely nothing to calm my nerves. Sitting in the car to Manila, Ryan and I made a solemn pact:

“When we get home, we are getting a new door.”

Custom-made doors sound expensive, but it turns out installation included can come in well under ₱50,000 (around USD $850–900) depending on the specs. Ours ended up in that range.


Finding a Shop in the Highlands

We live in the highlands of Cavite Province — a region rich in timber, where roadside shops selling handmade doors and furniture stretch for kilometers. Premium hardwoods like narra and kamagong are available for prices that would make any Westerner’s jaw drop. (Some species are technically protected, but that’s a different conversation.)

We found our shop almost by accident: MRT Door Design in Silang, Cavite, spotted on the roadside while moving in.

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