4 Advances in Hospital Room Doors | AD Systems

16 Jun.,2025

 

4 Advances in Hospital Room Doors | AD Systems

1. Space-efficient and acoustically rated patient room doors

Commercial sliding door systems dedicate less usable space to door swings and approach clearances. For example, ExamSlide™ sliding doors can save up to 30 square feet per door. This means more square footage can be used for seating and furnishing, cabinets, mobile workstations and other essential items. Further, by eliminating door swing clearances and using no-twist ADA compliant hardware, ExamSlide is more accessible for all.

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These sliding door systems are also available with drop-down bottom seals and gaskets to close up the problematic leaky perimeter gaps between the wall and door while still ensuring ease of operation. They comply with the Facility Guidelines Institute and ADA guidelines and can earn a Noise Isolation Class (NIC) rating of up to 39. Their high acoustic rating helps protect patient confidentiality, which provides necessary acute care room privacy.

2. Easily accessible patient bathroom doors

As evidenced in the first point, acute care rooms can easily become crowded and inaccessible due to the number of essential items and features that need to be present. These accessibility issues increase when patients need bed lifts to move from the bed to a wheelchair and beyond. When a patient room includes a bathroom, installing a sliding door can help save valuable space while also making operation easier, both of which aid accessibility goals for added patient comfort and satisfaction. Further benefiting patient use, the ExamSlide sliding door frame can be made in a Barrier Free configuration. This design option splits the top frame to accommodate a bed lift, allowing patients to be transported through the sliding door opening.

3. Hands-free technology for hospital room doors

Over the past few years, more emphasis has been placed on reducing potential points of infection. Because door handles are some of the most commonly touched surfaces in all buildings, they can host a variety of bacteria and viruses and pose a risk to hospital patients and staff. To reduce touchpoints, hands-free technology, like the AutoMotion™ system, can be added to most of AD Systems’ sliding doors. A quick wave or simple push of a button signals the door to open and close. Low-energy and quiet operators with safety sensors ensure a safe, hygienic and effortless passage.

4. Perimeter gaskets and seals for negative pressure rooms

While perimeter gaskets and drop-down seals can boost acoustic performance, they may also help hospital room doors meet isolation room requirements, per their test results to UL- standard for air leakage. Both sliding and swinging doors are often considered the weak links in a wall assembly since they can have a slight gap between the door, its frame and the floor. The perimeter gaskets and drop-down seals on the ExamSlide system quickly and effectively seal the door’s perimeter to help airflow and pressure management systems create a safe and sealed off environment.

Advances in hospital doors allow for better designs

Advanced hospital room doors can save space, create accessible rooms, mitigate infection risk and provide flexibility in healthcare design. When specified carefully, they can help create a facility that is more efficient and more comfortable for patients and staff. However, to maximize the potential benefits, design teams may need multiple systems. AD Systems sliding and swinging door systems can work together and be customized to fit a wide range of performance goals while also providing a cohesive design aesthetic. 

Five Crucial requirements for hospital doors

Before you select a hospital door, ask questions about these important qualities



Hospitals require the utmost standards of hygiene and cleanliness. Yet hospital design extends far beyond increasing hygiene.

Efficiency, cost and speed are all key concerns when designing any part of a modern hospital - particularly when you consider tightening budgets and an overburdened healthcare sector.

With these factors in mind, we’ve broken down the design requirements for hospital swing doors into 5 crucial segments for your consideration.

1) What is the weight & durability of the hospital door?

For most applications, such as around your home and in office spaces, the weight of a door is completely ignored. This should not be the case with hospital traffic doors.

Three major factors make weight an important consideration for hospital door design:

  • The frequency of people travelling through the door
  • The speed at which they are travelling, and
  • The way that they open the door.

A hospital Emergency Department will have high frequency, high speed traffic, day and night. That means all doors need to open quickly, yet still be durable enough to take repeated impacts. 

There is however a more crucial factor: the way people navigate through hospital doors.  in fact it isn’t uncommon to hear thermal traffic doors referred to as 'crash doors' thanks to the punishment they are subjected to.

In a lot of cases, such as when nurses are wheeling beds, wheel chairs and trolleys through hospital doors, they travel backwards using their shoulder, heel or backside to push through the door. Even when travelling forward, opening a heavy door while also pushing, towing or carrying an item can be very difficult. This is something Equipment Manager, Troy, at St John of God, Ballarat Hospital identified as a major issue for his workplace. 

“The doors were far too heavy, and presented a concern in terms of ease of use, weight and functionality.”

Strain injury was becoming a major concern at Ballarat hospital with their old, heavy timber doors. Troy even goes on to say that “there was a possibility  we would have to decommission suites.” This shows how what may seem a minor concern can become a massive roadblock to the effectiveness of the hospital.

Remax Products were contacted to install Hospital Theatre swing doors to replace all timber hospital doors.

2) What materials are the hospital doors made from?

Luckily, timber doors are no longer the only option. New technology has allowed doorway and barrier companies to create one-piece polymer doors with high-density foam cores, offering a lightweight, strong, insulating and durable alternative.

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Some polymer doors are even ultra high pressure filled, offering a density comparable to that of a timber door with an added, impressive thermal R-value of 3. These polymer doors can help save on air conditioning and heating bills throughout the hospital, as well as increasing efficiency and safety.

But polymer doors offer another significant advantage for hospitals: the added benefit for hygiene. Polymer panels have no gaps or joins and are impervious to moisture and acid petroleum products. This is crucial in a hospital where any chip in a timber door can create a harbourage for undesirable pathogens, and as we know, Surgical Site Infections (SSIs) are the second most common site of healthcare associated infections (HAIs)*.

There are several steps that have to be connected to result in infection for SSIs. The initial introduction of microbial pathogens occurs most often during the surgical procedure performed in the Operating Theatre (OT), so it makes sense to assess this risk influenced by characteristics of the healthcare facility (amongst other characteristics) and by method of elimination, cut out all possible risks of harbouring pathogens including timber doors.

A further advantage of most polymer doors is that the colour is evenly impregnated throughout the door. This means that the door maintains integrity and colour even with the toughest use and wear.

The benefits of a polymer door with its high durability and insulation qualities make it the better choice for hospitals looking to invest in their facility’s future.

3) How quickly do the doors open and close?

Speed is crucial in a hospital, where decisions need to be lightning fast and response times can be the difference between life and death. That's why it's so important that every part of the hospital is designed for optimal speed and efficiency, while not compromising on hygiene or durability.

The speed of a swing door depends on its weight, the resistance provided by the bearings, pressure and spring buffers on the door, and the force applied to open it. By keeping the weight to a minimum, you can immediately increase the door's opening speed.

Having the door on durable yet smooth mountings is another step. In fact, many hospitals rely on a quad-action opening mechanism, where double-hinged frames allow the door to open through 180 degrees each way. This means that traffic is equally unimpeded regardless of its direction.

To add to this, faster doors also mean less time for transfer of pathogens or other unwanted intruders through the doorway.

4) Does the door have a tight seal?

In any building, a door’s seal is important; in a hospital even more so. A tight seal is essential for hygiene measures, to protect against, dust, insects and contaminants.

It's crucial that a hospital door's seal is not only airtight and resilient, but also has very little space in its construction for harbouring unwanted contaminants. The seal can be one of the places where buildup is most likely to occur, particularly because it is the contact surface that rubs against the floor and ceiling, but also because it is often made of rubber, which is more susceptible to residue buildup than either polymer or stainless steel.

It is also important to ensure that your door is corrosion resistant, because corrosion will not only affect performance but also provide a perfect opportunity for contamination. This is largely the reason why hospitals and healthcare facilities use polymer and stainless steel for their hospital doors.

The seal on other doors around the hospital, including any roller doors to the external environment, should also be closely scrutinised. 

5) What additional options are available?

Clearly not every hospital has the same layout or the same budget. That's why it's important that the door you choose has a standard option and then offers particular features as add-ons (keeping in mind that some add-ons will preserve the life the door for longer, which reduces maintenance costs down the line. So although you may be saving money right now by avoiding add-ons, you may need to think about your maintenance budget in the future).

6 key optional add-ons you should consider are:

  • Spring buffers: Pretensioned springs used to absorb impact and allow doors to open gently under stress, spring buffers give the door a reasonably uniform opening sequence (regardless of the pressure being applied to it), and also preserve the door against heavier impacts. Options will often include both polymer and stainless steel kick plates.

  • Mounting options: Most swing doors will be offered with a normal mounting plate but should also have the option for a support frame. This is a frame designed for openings that don’t have the requisite strength to support the door and the traffic flowing through it.
    The support frame should easily fit to the inside of the doorframe to create a structurally sound framework. A well-designed support frame will come with bearings pre-mounted in the factory to ensure simple installation.

  • Windows: Windows in hospital doors are crucial to know what is on the other side of the door, particularly when moving patients or fragile equipment, and all good swing door suppliers will offer you a range of windows for your door of choice.
    For example Remax Doors offers window frames in black, yellow, or white; the windows are available in clear, frosted or embedded with signage; and double windows can be fitted per leaf.
    Preferably window choice will include double-glazed windows to assist with insulation. Good suppliers will also offer a window blind built into the glass of the window which provides privacy for hospital theatres when required but are sealed within the glass and will not harbour bacteria nor dust.

Push plates: Despite earlier mentioning that many hospital staff open the door in an unorthodox manner, it is still important to provide push plates to create an attractive focal point for entering personal. This encourages everyone to concentrate their contact with the door in one place, reducing grime to a single area that can be more easily cleaned. Consultants at Remax Doors often suggest adding stainless steel push plates on lighter coloured doors for this reason.

  • Kick plates: Stainless steel / polymer kick plates assist with impact caused by trolleys / beds and pedestrian traffic while also maintaining the look of the door by helping to prevent scuffing on the door at foot level.

Talk to us about selecting your ideal hospital doors

If you would like to learn more about the various traffic doors available for hospitals, contact Remax Doors online or call us on  010 221. 

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