Fast, Reliable Gate Repair Across North Portland
Gate repair in North Portland typically costs $180–$650 depending on whether you’re dealing with rotted posts, rust-seized hinges, or full structural realignment, and most jobs are completed same-day. Stephen Rogers — owner and lead technician at Cardinal Gate Repair Vancouver — handles every North Portland call personally, bringing 11 years of brand-specific gate expertise across the Columbia River. We’re familiar with the soggy fence lines of St. Johns, the shaded lots near Cathedral Park, and the waterlogged soils along the Columbia Slough that make North Portland gate problems different from anywhere else in Portland. Call (833) 719-7067 for a free estimate, and we’ll usually be there within the hour.
Why Cardinal Gate Repair Vancouver Is North Portland’s Preferred Gate Repair Company
We’ve crossed the Interstate Bridge into North Portland enough times to know which streets flood first and which backyards never see direct sunlight. That local knowledge matters when you’re diagnosing why a gate won’t close in February.
Our 527 customer reviews averaging 4.7 stars span 11 years of exclusively gate-focused work — not handyman side jobs or franchise crews rotating through. North Portland homeowners specifically mention Stephen Rogers by name in their feedback because he’s the same person who answers the phone, loads the truck, and welds the repair.
Response time to North Portland averages under 60 minutes from initial call. We keep LiftMaster, FAAC, and Linear motor parts stocked for common failures, plus stainless hardware and pressure-treated posts for the rot work that dominates our North Portland calls. No waiting on subcontractor schedules. No dispatchers guessing at your gate brand.
We also understand the permitting landscape. Portland’s Bureau of Development Services has specific setback and height rules for gates over six feet, and we’ve navigated enough post-replacement jobs in Kenton and University Park to know when a simple repair stays permit-free versus when a full rebuild triggers inspection requirements.
Our Gate Repair Services in North Portland
Hinge Repair
North Portland’s persistent dampness destroys standard steel hinges. In the 97203 zip — St. Johns, Cathedral Park, and surrounding blocks — we regularly pull hinges that have fused solid with rust after five or six winters of never fully drying. Our hinge repair isn’t just swapping hardware. We assess whether the post itself has rotted enough that new hinges will pull out within a year, then upgrade to stainless steel or galvanized assemblies sized for your gate’s actual weight. For wooden gates under tree canopy, we often relocate the hinge mount point above the rot line and backfill with decay-resistant material.
Post Repair
This is our most common North Portland service, and it’s rarely a quick fix. Portland’s roughly 43 inches of annual rain, combined with those long overcast stretches from October through April, keeps wooden posts in North Portland saturated for months. Low-lying areas near the Columbia Slough and Willamette Peninsula experience ground saturation that causes posts to heave, shift, and rot at ground level. By the time a gate is sagging or binding, the post base is typically punky all the way through. We excavate the old post, set a decay-resistant replacement below the frost line with proper drainage gravel, and rehang the gate plumb. On a shaded north-facing gate in St. Johns, we found the bottom rail and post base completely punky from years of moisture trapped under moss algae. We replaced the rotted post with a decay-resistant alternative and rebuilt the hinge assembly with stainless steel hardware to prevent rust-seizing, restoring smooth operation.
Weld Repair
Metal gates in North Portland face a different enemy: corrosion at weld points where powder coating has failed, typically at the bottom rail where splash-back from saturated ground accelerates rust. Our in-house welding capability means we fabricate replacement sections on-site rather than ordering full panels. For wrought-iron or steel gates near industrial areas like the Portland Harbor, we grind back to clean metal, weld in fresh material, and apply cold-galvanizing compound before touch-up paint. This saves North Portland property managers the cost of full gate replacement when the frame is otherwise sound.
Gate Realignment
Ground movement from Portland’s wet winters throws gates out of square faster than almost anywhere we work. Post-earth movement in low-lying North Portland sections — especially near the Slough — pulls latch receivers and striker plates out of alignment until the gate won’t catch or a self-closing mechanism strains against the skew. We diagnose whether the problem is post shift, hinge wear, or frame twist, then correct the geometry. Sometimes that means resetting a post. Sometimes it’s welding a new catch bracket in the correct position. We don’t sell you a new gate because the old one went rhomboid.
What happens when you call
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A real person answersNo phone trees — you reach a local pro.
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You get an upfront price rangeHonest numbers before anyone is dispatched.
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A background-checked tech heads outLicensed & insured, dispatched right away.
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You approve before work beginsNothing starts until you say go.
Trusted Brands We Service in North Portland
We work on LiftMaster, FAAC, and Linear systems specifically — not gates in general. These three brands dominate the automatic gate openers we encounter in North Portland’s residential and light-commercial installations, from the estate driveways near Forest Park’s edge to the multi-family entries along Lombard Street. We stock common failure parts for all three: circuit boards, limit switches, gear assemblies, and remote receivers. That local parts inventory means a FAAC 415 operator with a stripped gearbox or a Linear actuator with a seized motor doesn’t wait two weeks for shipping. Stephen Rogers has factory training documentation for each brand’s diagnostic sequences, so we’re not guessing which error code means what.
Common Gate Repair Problems We See in North Portland Homes
- Moisture-rotted posts at ground level. The dominant housing stock in North Portland — Craftsman bungalows and wood-frame homes built 1910 to 1950 — features original or early-replacement wooden gates built from untreated lumber. Decades of Portland rainfall have reduced many post bases to spongy pulp that no longer supports the gate’s weight.
- Rust-seized hinges on perpetually shaded gates. North-facing fence lines under established tree canopy — common in St. Johns and Cathedral Park — develop thick moss and algae layers that hold moisture against hinges year-round. By the time the gate sticks, the hinge pin is often welded in place by corrosion.
- Post heave from ground saturation near the Columbia Slough. Low-lying sections of 97203 experience waterlogged soils that expand and contract, tilting posts and throwing gate frames out of square. Latches miss. Self-closers strain. The gate appears “broken” when it’s actually misaligned.
- Gate frames pulled out of square by shifting soils. The Willamette Peninsula’s clay-heavy soils swell with winter moisture and shrink in dry summers, a cycle that gradually distorts rectangular gate frames into parallelograms. Hinges bind. Locks don’t reach. We correct the geometry rather than replace the gate.
Pricing for Gate Repair in North Portland, OR
Honest numbers from our last 18 months of North Portland calls:
| Service | Typical Range in North Portland |
|---|---|
| Hinge repair/replacement (standard hardware) | $180–$280 |
| Hinge repair with stainless steel upgrade | $240–$340 |
| Single post replacement (decay-resistant material) | $350–$550 |
| Double post replacement with concrete footing | $650–$950 |
| Weld repair (localized, in-house fabrication) | $200–$400 |
| Gate realignment (no post work) | $150–$250 |
| Gate realignment with post reset | $400–$650 |
What moves you up or down within these ranges: depth of rot excavation, soil conditions (clay and rock take longer), whether we hit buried utilities, and gate material weight. We diagnose on-site and quote before starting work — estimates are free, and we don’t charge for the trip if you decline. Most North Portland repairs fall in the $250–$450 band. Call (833) 719-7067 for an exact quote on your gate.
We Also Serve Cities Near North Portland
Our service radius extends naturally from our Vancouver base into Portland’s northern neighborhoods and adjacent suburbs. We regularly repair gates in Kenton — where industrial-to-residential conversions feature mixed gate types — Bethany and Cedar Mill with their newer planned-community installations, and Oak Hills mid-century properties with original ironwork. Our Gate Repair team covers the full metro corridor with the same owner-led response.
Serving North Portland, OR — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the North Portland area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — Gate Repair in North Portland
North Portland wooden gates rot faster than Portland’s eastside equivalents because 97203’s dense tree canopy and north-facing exposures keep wood perpetually damp, while Portland’s 43 inches of annual rain provides constant moisture supply. The moss and algae that colonize shaded gates act like sponges, holding water against the wood even during dry spells. By the time you notice a sag or stick, the bottom rail and post base have often turned punky. We replace with decay-resistant posts and stainless hardware to break the cycle. Call (833) 719-7067 for a free assessment — we’ll show you exactly where the rot starts.
Almost never, in our experience. St. Johns gates stick because the post has rotted or the hinge has rust-seized, not because the hinge is merely loose. We’ve adjusted hundreds of North Portland hinges only to have the customer call back within weeks when the real problem — punky wood or corroded pins — finally lets go. Stephen Rogers diagnoses the actual failure before touching a wrench. If your post base is sound, we’ll adjust and lubricate for under $200. If it’s rotted, we’ll tell you before we start. Call (833) 719-7067 and we’ll sort out which problem you actually have.
Simple repairs — hinge replacement, latch adjustment, motor troubleshooting — do not require Portland Bureau of Development Services permits. You trigger permitting when a gate exceeds six feet in height, when you’re replacing posts that support a structure, or when the repair involves electrical work beyond plug-in opener replacement. We’ve navigated enough post-replacement jobs in Kenton and University Park to know the boundary. If your job might require inspection, we’ll flag it in our estimate and handle the paperwork. Call (833) 719-7067 to discuss your specific situation.
Moisture-rotted posts with rust-seized hinges, almost always on the same gate. Cathedral Park’s mature street trees and shaded lots create ideal conditions for wood decay and corrosion. We typically find the bottom six inches of post turned to pulp while the hinge pin has corroded into a solid mass. A quick fix addresses neither problem. Our standard Cathedral Park scope replaces the post with decay-resistant material, upgrades to stainless or galvanized hinges, and sometimes relocates the hinge mount above the historical rot line. Call (833) 719-7067 for a repair that lasts.
Your hinges rust because they’re standard steel in an environment that rarely drops below 60% humidity, with direct moisture contact from moss, soil splash, and condensed fog on north-facing exposures. North Portland’s 97203 zip averages 155 days of measurable precipitation annually; standard hinges simply aren’t designed for that. We solve this with stainless steel or hot-dip galvanized hardware rated for marine-adjacent exposure, sometimes combined with hinge relocation to reduce ground contact. The upgrade costs $60–$120 more than standard replacement and typically triples hinge lifespan. Call (833) 719-7067 for a rust-proofing assessment.
Written by Stephen Rogers, Owner at Cardinal Gate Repair Vancouver, serving North Portland and the greater Portland-Vancouver metro since 2013.