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The enquiry

Tell us about the door

A few lines is plenty. Say what it's doing (or what you're planning), roughly where the garage sits on the block, and how to reach you. You'll get a straight answer, not a sales script.

No phone number to call yet? That's deliberate while the business is being set up: this form is the channel that reaches us, and it's read by a person.


What happens next

  • We read it properly. Old doors are specific; your note about the block and the opening is what makes the first visit useful.
  • Repairs get a call-out. A technician looks at the mechanism on site and quotes the fix before doing it. Call-out then on-site work is how repair pricing runs; no figures are promised sight-unseen.
  • New doors get a free measure and quote. The opening gets measured (width, height, headroom, side room), the access gets checked, and the quote is fixed from what the tape says, not what a brochure assumes.
  • Opener wiring is electrical work. Where a new opener needs mains wiring, that part is done by a licensed electrician, as the law requires.

Fair questions

Why is there no phone number?
The business is being set up and we'd rather not publish a number we can't yet answer around the clock. The form reaches us reliably; leave your number and the call comes from us.
Why no prices on the site?
Because no two of Mayfield's garages price the same, and a number invented online would only be wrong in person. Repairs are quoted on site after the mechanism is inspected; new doors are quoted after the opening is measured. Both quotes are free to ask for.
Can you really fit a modern door to a 1920s garage?
Often, yes; sometimes with carpentry first; occasionally the honest answer is a different door type than you had in mind. That's exactly what the measure decides. The long answer is here.