Bison Garage Doors High Security & Insulated Roller Doors for Redbrook,, Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire

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Domestic garage doors for efficiency & security

For efficient, reliable service roller doors made from the highest quality materials, when you need a garage door, you can count on Bison.

Choose from the Premier range of foam filled aluminium doors in a wide range of finishes, including wood effect, or you can opt for one of our rugged yet attractive galvanised steel roller doors.

These are made locally using the best quality components, then installed by our experienced team, so you know that the job will be right first time and the doors will last.

Whichever option you go for, the level of service is the same, we turn up on time, do a first-class job and leave your garage as tidy as when we arrived.

To find out more, visit our:

Choosing should be part of the fun

One of the joys of making a significant home improvement like a roller garage door or remote control entrance gate lies in the planning. Envisaging and anticipating the finished job should contribute to the overall experience.

To help in this, our showroom is now almost ready. Soon visitors will be able to inspect material samples, colour swatches and components all in one place, browse photo galleries of past projects and decide on the perfect combination for their plans.

You will find it so much easier to compare the quality of different materials when you are holding one in your hand, so give us a call and make a pre-booking. If you can't wait for the showroom to be finished, we are still delighted to pop out and visit you.

An image of Bison Perforated Security Shutter Interior View 001 goes here.
--Request Information-- --More Images Like This--Photo from Featured Project near Redbrook
Bison Perforated Security Shutter Interior View 001

Bison Roller Doors installs, maintains and repairs security rollers of all kinds. On doorways, windows, workshop and factory entrances, as well as offices and retail outlets. All the materials and components used are of the highest possible quality, with particular attention paid to safety considerations including automatic braking systems and anti-drop mechanisms. Perforated roller doors allow light to enter and customers to see displays without compromising security. For emergency response and damage repairs, call us on the number shown.
Redbrook overlooks the River Wye and a riverside park created by the local community to mark the millennium. A little above the river is the 19th century Church of St Saviour. Redbrook was the northern terminus of the Wye Valley Railway. When it closed, its rails were taken up and sent to France during WWII.

Situated on a attractive stretch of the Wye, Redbrook was an important industrial centre thanks to an ample supply of water power which ran down the valley and surrounding hills to the river. From Swan Pool down to the Wye, a number of leats, dams and reservoir ponds were created with many industrial sites including mills, an iron furnace, tinplate works and copper works. The oldest site is the King's Mill, which was a corn mill fist recorded in 1434 and remained in use until 1925. Though destroyed by fire some ruins and the wheel pit can still be seen by the road leading up the valley (following the track of the 812 Monmouth & Coleford Tramway).

The Redbrook Copper Works was established c1960 using ore brought from Cornwall via Chepstow and worked until 1740 when it closed down and the buildings leased for the manufacturer of tinplate. The tinplate factory, run by the Redbrook Tinplate Co., was world famous for the high quality product it made and did not close until 1962. Today the manager's residence, dating from c1700, still survives (as private houses) but of the other buildings little now remains. Redbrook was also a port where the various products of the local industries were shipped out and the quay, though overgrown, still survives, along with a stone warehouse and a tram-road which linked the industrial works to this building can still be made out.

The most obvious feature at Redbrook is the wooden pedestrian bridge which once carried the Wye Valley railway across the river and now forms part of the Wye Valley Path.The railway was opened in 1876 to connect Monmouth to the South Wales line and did not close until 1964. On the opposite side of the river by the bridge is The Boat Inn, which originated as a hostelry for river watermen and is now an attractive little unspoilt real ale pub.

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