Wet Oregon winters are hard on gates. Rollers seize, tracks silt up, and openers that ran fine all summer start straining by November. If your Cornelius gate is dragging, we'll clean it up, replace what's worn, and get it rolling like it should, on any brand.
We do new installations too: driveway gates for in-town homes, farm-style entries for acreage outside city limits, and keypads or fob readers so the family gets in without keys. Cornelius is served from our Tualatin HQ along with the rest of Washington County.

Gate services in Cornelius
- Gate installation: New driveway and entry gates built for your property: sliding, swing, or bi-parting, with the operator, safety sensors, and wiring done right the first time.
- Gate repair & service: Gate stuck, dragging, or dead after a storm? We troubleshoot and repair motors, hinges, tracks, welds, and wiring on any make and model, not just the ones we install.
- Openers & automation: Add an operator to an existing gate or upgrade a failing one.
- Access control: Decide exactly who gets in and when: keypads, card and fob readers, vehicle sensors, and smartphone-app entry for gates, garages, and building doors.
- Video entry & intercoms: See and talk to visitors before the gate opens.
- Custom fabrication: Pedestrian gates, matching fence panels, and railings fabricated to match your driveway gate, so the whole frontage looks like one design, not three contractors.
- Commercial & barrier arms: Commercial slide gates, barrier arms, and HOA entrances with high-cycle operators, access logging, and camera integration, built for all-day traffic.
- Emergency gate repair: Gate stuck open or closed? Vehicle hit it? We dispatch fast from two local hubs and get you secure again.
Sitting between Hillsboro and Forest Grove on the Tualatin Valley Highway, Cornelius is on a route our west-county crews run all the time.
How it starts
One call. We come out, walk the property, measure the opening and slope, and give you a written quote: free, no pressure. If it's a repair, we diagnose first and tell you straight whether fixing or replacing makes more sense. See the full process →