To install a pocket door in an existing wall you have to remove drywall and it s easier to uncover the entire wall instead of trying to work in a limited opening.
Adding a pocket door to an existing wall.
Make sure the frame is level.
Pocket doors are easiest to install during the new construction phase but can be added to existing walls with the proper planning and tools.
To install a pocket door start by removing the existing door and the drywall on one side of the wall.
Then cut the exposed studs to make room for the new framing.
This can be done with plenty.
With the old door removed you can cut a hole in the drywall next to the existing doorway for the pocket.
Pocket doors slide into the wall and disappear completely from view.
A pocket door slides into a metal and wood cage that is installed as the walls are framed.
The total space should be about twice as wide as the door.
Installing a pocket door is not quite as fast a project as installing a sliding barn door on the exterior of the wall but like we mentioned last week we really love it for the sleek space saving benefits especially in an already narrow hallway every inch counts extra privacy and it still gives us that bit of hallway wall space to decorate.
Glue and screw together the 2 by 4s to build a pony wall a smaller non load bearing wall for hanging the track for the pocket doors.
Then put the hardware and door into the slider track.
There are double sliding doors that meet in the middle and one sided sliding doors that meet the wall along the door frame when closed.
Cut wall space.
Attach to the ceiling by screwing through the frame into the ceiling joists.
If the pocket is not deep enough the door will not recess completely into the wall.
Installing a pocket door in a load bearing wall requires replacing the old header with a longer one.
In some older homes a sliding pocket door was used to create privacy and separate a living room from a parlor or dining room.
Next install the slider track using the rails that came in your pocket door kit.
Be sure to screw the brackets into the studs.