this post was submitted on 12 Jan 2026
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Do It Yourself
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You need the knob side to stick out enough for the latch to not hit the wall, but putting the jamb against the (finished) wall surface should be enough. Then use something like quarter-round as trim to hide any gap left from shimming the door.
You might want to bring a long level and see how plumb and even that opening is. The trim work will look worse if there's a lot of variation in that wall, or if it's not vertical. In that case, depending on how much you care about the appearance, you could tear off the drywall and adjust or shim the studs to have a better wall to work from.
If you end up with the trim looking uneven because of variation in the wall, you can paint the wall, trim, and jamb all the same color to make it less noticeable. It doesn't look the best when you do that, but it might be preferable to seeing wobbly trim. And for a basement unit, it's probably fine.
Something like this:
Like I said, just make sure the latch hardware has enough clearance from the wall and you should be able to fit a 34" door in there. If you needed a 36" door, you'd probably have to either tear up the existing walls, or otherwise have something that looks a lot more weird.
I wouldn't mind tearing up the existing walls if it meant not having to grind up the concrete foundation to keep a 36" opening. The fridge I bought had to be brought down those stairs so getting it out will probably require going back up them lol.
I think tearing out the wall on the left would be ideal and then building the door jamb into the wall to keep it a 36" opening would be the best option.
Thanks!