Kennewick Homes, Kennewick Showers
Kennewick is the biggest of the Tri-Cities and easily the most varied. In a single week we might template a frameless enclosure in a new Southridge or Creekstone build, swap a corroded 1990s slider in a Canyon Lakes split-level, and hang a glass tub door in a mid-century ranch near Canal Drive. Each of those jobs calls for a different approach — new construction has flexible fiberglass surrounds that need load spread across framing, while older plaster-and-tile bathrooms are solid but rarely square.
That’s the case for measuring every opening instead of forcing a box-store “standard” door: Kennewick doesn’t have a standard bathroom.
What Kennewick Homeowners Ask For Most
- Frameless upgrades in Southridge-area masters. Builders often deliver just a curtain rod or a builder-grade door; a frameless door or custom enclosure finishes the room the way the rest of the house deserves.
- Bypass sliders for tub combos in established neighborhoods off Highway 395 and Clearwater Avenue — tight bathrooms where a swinging door can’t fit.
- Replacements before listing. With Kennewick homes turning over quickly, a new glass door is one of the cheapest ways to make bathroom photos pop.
We serve all of Kennewick — ZIP codes 99336, 99337, and 99338 — plus Finley and the Highway 397 corridor. Neighbors in Richland, Pasco, and West Richland get the same free-measurement service.
Shower Door Services in Kennewick
Kennewick Shower Door FAQs
Do you charge for quotes in Kennewick?
No — measurement visits and written quotes are free anywhere in Kennewick, including Southridge, Canyon Lakes, Creekstone, and central Kennewick.
How soon can you measure in Kennewick?
Usually within a few business days. Kennewick is the center of our service area, so scheduling is fast.
Can you match the matte black fixtures in my new Southridge build?
Yes — matte black hinges, handles, and framing are stocked options, along with brushed nickel, chrome, and champagne bronze.
My Kennewick home has a fiberglass surround. Can it take a glass door?
Yes, with the right unit: semi-frameless and framed doors spread weight through their frames, and we anchor into solid backing rather than trusting the shell.