Key Takeaways
- Commercial automatic sliding doors are specified to ANSI A156.10 (full-energy, high-traffic) or ANSI A156.19 (low-energy, retrofit and accessibility).
- Manufacturer-certified install of Stanley, Record, Nabco, Besam, Dorma (now dormakaba) operators.
- Bi-parting (two leaves), single-slide (one leaf), telescopic (4 leaves) and all-glass (frameless) configurations.
- Sensors: motion detection (microwave or PIR) plus safety beam array meeting ANSI/BHMA requirements.
A commercial automatic sliding door is the workhorse of Canadian retail entrances, healthcare facilities, hotel lobbies, airport terminals, and accessible public buildings. Auto sliding doors combine glass aesthetics, accessibility compliance (CSA B651, ADA), high-traffic capacity, and energy-control via threshold air seals. We install every major operator brand sold in Canada under one master service agreement.
Operator brands we install
- Stanley Access — broad lineup, strong parts availability across Canada
- Record (now part of Assa Abloy) — premium operators with extended cycle ratings
- Nabco — Japanese precision engineering, very low maintenance
- Besam (now Assa Abloy) — heavy-duty European spec, hospital-grade
- dormakaba (Dorma + Kaba merger) — full-line, integrated access control
- Horton Automatics — North-American manufacture, fast lead times
Configurations
- Bi-parting — two leaves split from centre, ANSI A156.10 standard for retail and healthcare entrances
- Single-slide — one leaf travels left or right, fits narrower openings
- Telescopic — 4 leaves (2 each side) for wide openings without proportional pocket depth
- All-glass — frameless tempered glass leaves with edge-mounted operators, premium retail and corporate
- Curved (radial) — leaves track on a curve, used in airports and high-end hospitality
ANSI standard selection
- ANSI A156.10 — Full-Energy — high-traffic, full-speed activation, safety sensors mandatory. Used at retail entrances, hospital lobbies, transit terminals.
- ANSI A156.19 — Low-Energy — slower activation, no safety sensors required (the door inherently moves slow enough to not impact). Used for accessibility retrofit and lower-traffic doors.
- ANSI A156.38 — Power-Operated Pedestrian Doors — covers swing-style automatic operators (separate product family).
The standard determines sensor specification, sign requirements, daily-test logging, and annual certification — we document all four on every install.
Annual safety certification
Every commercial automatic sliding door in Canada requires annual AAADM (American Association of Automatic Door Manufacturers) certification — a documented physical test of safety sensors, activation timing, force, and emergency-egress operation. We provide certification with every install plus annual renewal at year 1, 2, 3+. Failure to certify carries liability exposure if a sensor fails and someone is injured.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the lead time for a commercial automatic sliding door?
6-10 weeks typical for stock configurations; 12-16 weeks for custom (curved, all-glass, oversized). The operator itself is 2-3 weeks; glass and frame fabrication drive the rest of the schedule.
How often do automatic sliding doors need service?
Operator overhauls every 7-10 years. Annual safety certification is mandatory. Most commercial sliding doors run 15-20 years with proper maintenance.
Can you retrofit an existing entrance for automatic operation?
Yes. The most common retrofit is converting a manual storefront to ANSI A156.19 low-energy operation — adds an operator and door-position sensor without requiring sensor mat or beam array. Typical retrofit cost is 40-60% of full-energy new install.
Do you service all operator brands?
Yes — Stanley, Record, Nabco, Besam, dormakaba, Horton, and legacy brands. Service truck inventory covers all five major brands; less-common brands require parts order with 3-5 day return service.
Related: Automatic Doors · Storefront Doors · Door Operators · Hardware
