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The doors: Making a grand entrance matters

Architects and interior designers are knocking on wood and slaying it with steel to make unique statements with doors 

July 15, 2023 / 12:13 IST
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South door of the Baptistery of St John in Florence, Italy. (Photo by Ayesha Banerjee)
South door of the Baptistery of St John in Florence, Italy. (Photo by Ayesha Banerjee)

Film producer and designer Gauri Khan tweeted a photograph of hers sometime back in ripped jeans and jacket, leaning against the gate leading to her Mumbai bungalow, its name Mannat contrasting starkly with a glittery background. “The main door of your home is the entry point for your family and friends. So the name plate attracts positive energy… we chose a transparent material with glass crystals that emit a positive, uplifting and calm vibe,” she posted.

Khan was right. Doors have been worthy of love and respect ever since Paleolithic man felt the need to roll a big boulder to block the mouth of his cave home after spotting a glyptodon scrambling around in the bushes outside.

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Doors go way back. A 153cm high and 88cm wide piece made of poplar unearthed during a parking lot dig in Zurich, Switzerland, is believed to be more than 5,000 years old and part of a Neolithic village that once existed there. Even after all those centuries, archaeologists felt it looked elegant with rather well-preserved hinges.

Doors also take entry and exit points to the next heavenly level. In Egypt, a 175 cm ‘false’ granite door with hieroglyphics and carvings found at the tomb of a minister of Queen Hatshepsut (who ruled from 1478 or 1479 BC till her death in 1458 BC) was supposed to help souls transition to other realms.