Call PDA and you reach Paul — the specialist who sources your door, reviews the code path, verifies the measurements, and stands behind the install. No call center. No factory script. One accountable point, from first photo to final trim.
No measurements needed yet. Send a photo and Paul will point you in the right direction.
The wrong door, wrong approval path, wrong measurement, wrong finish, or wrong install plan can turn a luxury upgrade into an expensive problem. Paul built PDA to give Florida homeowners, builders, and design professionals one owner-direct partner who helps choose the right door — before anything is ordered.
Not sure what style or approval path your opening needs? Start with one photo.
No pressure. Paul reviews the opening directly.For years I watched homeowners about to spend $8,000–$30,000 on a front entrance take “advice” from someone who only sold one brand. The recommendation was never about the home — it was about the catalog. PDA is the opposite. I’m not tied to a factory, so I can tell you which manufacturer actually fits your opening, your style, your budget, and your county’s code — and which doesn’t. I measure it, verify it in CAD, review the approval path before anything is ordered, and coordinate the install through the proper licensed path. You work with me — start to finish.
— Paul, PDA Doors & More
Most iron-door companies represent one factory, so they recommend whatever they sell. We don’t. Independent sourcing means your door is matched to the architecture, the opening, the budget, the timeline, and your code path — then to the best impact-rated manufacturer for it. No brand loyalty. No quota. Just the right entrance.
Wrong style, size, or product approval for your county.
Field-measured and CAD-verified, never guessed.
Coastal-grade for salt air and sun.
Set, sealed, and anchored right, through the proper licensed path.
The expensive mistakes usually happen before the door is ordered. That is why PDA starts with the home, the opening, the code path, and the design intent — not a catalog.
We confirm details before anything is ordered.Photo → independent sourcing → field measurement → CAD verification → Florida code & approval review → install coordination → final walkthrough.
One partner, photo to final trim. Every step catches issues while they’re still cheap to solve.
Impact glass, Florida Product Approval / NOA guidance, wind-load, and jurisdiction-specific review — settled before anything is ordered, with installation coordinated through the proper licensed path. We help gather and verify the right documentation so your project clears review without surprises.
Code path and documentation are reviewed before fabrication.
The right door for your home — not the one we’re paid to push.
You reach Paul, who runs the project start to finish.
Impact, NOA, and wind-load reviewed for your jurisdiction before ordering.
Field-measured and CAD-verified so it fits the first time.
Coordinated through the proper licensed path, with a final walkthrough.
Guidance that makes the entrance one of the best features of the home.
Text a Photo →Entrance systems engineered for salt air, humidity, and Florida wind-load and impact requirements.
Review My Opening →One reliable partner that protects schedules and reduces callbacks.
Send Plans →Design intent executed with precision — sight lines, finishes, and detailing.
Discuss Specs →Code-correct, durable entries with one accountable point of contact.
Request Project Review →What owner-direct, independent guidance produces — across Tampa Bay and beyond.

BeforeAfter“Paul walked us through every step and the result was beautiful — incredibly responsive throughout.”
Before fabrication, PDA helps catch the details that derail an entrance — measurements, the approval path, finish, glass, CAD, and install coordination. One accountable partner reviews it all, so what arrives is the door your home was measured for.
No measurements needed yet. Paul reviews the opening directly.
Text a photo of your opening to Paul. No measurements needed yet. PDA will review the home, the opening, the style direction, and the likely code path before recommending the next step.