Heavy tempered glass, precision-templated to your opening — installed start to finish by our own team with zero subcontracting.


A true frameless enclosure uses no metal channel around the glass — just thick, heavy tempered glass and precisely placed hardware. The result is a clean, open look that makes any bathroom feel larger.
Every opening we template by hand. No two showers are exactly the same, and our field measurements ensure a watertight, plumb fit every time.

Not every project calls for fully frameless. Semi-frameless enclosures add a slim metal channel at the perimeter — offering excellent containment and a clean look at a more accessible price point.
Sliding bypass doors are ideal for spaces where a swinging door would be impractical. They glide on precision hardware and are available in all the same glass and finish options.
Whatever your layout — one wall, a corner, a bay, or a built-in niche — we design and install the enclosure that fits. Here are the styles we build most often.
Clear is classic, but you have options. From ultra-clear low-iron glass to privacy-frosted and designer patterns — here's what we stock.











Hinges, handles, towel bars and clips — all available in 15 designer finishes so your shower hardware coordinates perfectly with the rest of your bathroom.
*Finish availability varies by hardware style. Contact us to confirm your finish for a specific piece.
Whether you want the slimmest sliding bypass, a sealed-to-the-ceiling steam enclosure, the crystal clarity of low-iron glass, or just a straightforward swap of an old dated door — we have a page that goes deeper on each.
Doors, panels, returns and transoms — the umbrella page covering every frameless configuration we build.
Read more →Bypass enclosures with sealed-bearing rollers — perfect for tight NJ bathrooms with no swing room.
Read more →Sealed-to-the-ceiling with transom panels and vapor-rated hardware. Steam-tight installs that hold up.
Read more →Crystal-clear glass with no green tint — for tile lovers who want their material to read true.
Read more →Replacing dated framed or sliding doors with frameless — typically without re-tiling the surround.
Read more →Every town we cover in Bergen County, with the showroom nearest each — all on one page.
Browse county →A sample of frameless and semi-frameless shower enclosures recently completed by our team. Click any photo to enlarge.












Every enclosure is handled start to finish by our own team — from the first field measurement to the final wipe-down of your new glass.
We visit your space, discuss options, finishes and glass types, and take precise field measurements — all at no charge and with no obligation.
Your glass is cut, tempered, edged and finished to your exact specification — built in our own shop, not shipped from a factory.
Our installers arrive with everything needed. The enclosure is set level, watertight and clean — and we walk you through maintenance before we leave.
Cost depends on glass thickness (3/8" vs 1/2"), the size of the opening, your hardware finish and the type of glass you choose. We provide a detailed, itemized quote after a free in-home measure — no vague estimates, no surprises at invoice time.
True frameless enclosures use either 3/8" or 1/2" heavy tempered safety glass. The 1/2" glass has a noticeably more substantial feel and is the premium option. Semi-frameless and framed doors use 3/16" or 1/4" glass — all fully to code and safe.
Typically 1–2 weeks from the field measure to installation. Installation of a standard shower enclosure takes just a few hours in one visit. We'll give you a firm timeline at the time of your quote.
Very likely, yes. We carry 15 hardware finishes — including chrome, brushed nickel, matte black, polished brass, satin brass, oil-rubbed bronze and more. Bring a sample or photo and we'll find the closest match.
It's an optional treatment that bonds to the glass surface and creates a hydrophobic barrier — water beads up and rolls off instead of sitting and leaving spots. It makes daily cleaning far easier and keeps the glass looking crystal clear longer. Highly recommended, especially in hard-water areas of North Jersey.
Yes — all of them. Neo-angle (angled corner fit), steam enclosures (sealed to the ceiling with a transom), tub enclosures and sliding bypass doors are all within our everyday scope of work. If you have an unusual opening, bring us a photo and we'll design a solution.
Yes — and it's something we deal with constantly in older North Jersey homes. Tile walls, framing and tile-to-curb transitions are almost never perfectly plumb. We hand-template each opening, taking measurements at multiple heights, and the glass is cut and edge-finished to the actual opening rather than a "spec" rectangle. Out-of-plumb hinges are accommodated with adjustable pivots and (where needed) tapered notches in the panel. The finished enclosure looks square and seals tight even when the walls aren't.
A properly designed and installed frameless enclosure doesn't leak in normal residential use. The trick is in the details: correct sweep selection for the bottom of the door, polycarbonate seals where panels meet, a slight inward pitch on the curb, and clear silicone in the right places (not everywhere — over-siliconing actually causes long-term issues). Splash from a frameless door directed straight at a gap is something we engineer around in the field-measure stage. If you've had a previous leaking door it was almost certainly a worn sweep, missing seal, or pitch issue — all fixable in a re-build.
Both are heavy tempered safety glass and both are considered "true frameless." The 3/8" glass is the most common spec — it feels substantial, looks clean and works for the vast majority of openings. The 1/2" glass adds another step up in feel: more weight in the door, quieter close, even more refined edge. For very tall panels, very wide doors, or openings where the glass is doing more structural work, 1/2" is the right call. We'll recommend the right thickness for your opening at the measure — it's not always the thicker one that's better. See our full thickness guide for more detail.
We measure once the tile is fully grouted and any final caulking around the curb and walls is in place — typically that's a few days after the tile guy finishes. We don't need the rest of the bathroom (vanity, paint, fixtures) done; what we care about is the actual shower opening being its final dimensions. If your tile installer is still on-site, you can have them ask us — we're happy to coordinate sequencing so we don't lose a week between tile finish and glass install.
It depends on the curb. A solid-surface or stone curb (marble, quartz, granite saddle) creates a clean transition between the tile floor of the shower and the bathroom floor outside, gives water something to land on, and looks finished. Most of our frameless installs have one. Tiled curbs without a saddle are possible but require very careful grout-line placement at the door's bottom sweep — we'll talk through whether your opening would benefit from one at the measure.
Yes — that's the most common kind of replacement we do. We remove your old door and hardware, prep the tile (clean off old silicone, treat any screw-hole or rust marks), and template a fresh enclosure to land cleanly on the existing tile. New hardware placement is chosen to cover old screw holes where possible. See our shower door replacement page for the full process.
We use heavy tempered safety glass, premium hardware, precise field measurements and our own in-house installation team. No subcontractors. No guesswork. No vague pricing. Just a custom enclosure built to fit your bathroom correctly the first time.
Most custom enclosures vary with size, glass thickness, layout, hardware finish and glass type. We give you a firm, itemized quote after a free in-home measure — and offer monthly payment options so you don't have to choose between quality and budget.
Tell us about your project — we'll schedule your free in-home measure with no obligation, and you'll have a firm written quote in hand within a couple of days.
Call, text or fill out the form — we'll get back to you with a free estimate, typically within one business day.
Text Jessica directly and she'll get right back to you. To speed things up, include: