What if a project calls for a heavy door that needs controlled swing but no self-closing or soft-closing function? Some special applications—such as this hospital case—only require one job done well: 120 degree door stop, not close it and not hold it open.

“We don’t need them to hold open, because we don’t want them to be self-closing. We need them to just stop the door swing at 120 or 125. Do you have a standard hinge that just functions as a stop and not a closer?”

In situations like these, the door hinges must stay entirely neutral—no tension, no detent, just a precise mechanical stop that protects workflow and eliminates unnecessary motion.

healthcare room door

A Healthcare Project in Kentucky

Recently, an inquiry came from Baptist Health ER & Urgent Care in Kentucky asking for the door hinges of their exam room doors. The door specs include:

  • 36″ W × 84″ H
  • 1-3/4″ thick plastic-laminate doors from VT Industries
  • Mounted on hollow metal frames

Their requirement was very clear: a hinge solution that stops the door at 120–125° with no self-closing and no hold-open function. In short, they needed standard hinges that act purely as a controlled door stop—nothing more.

This requirement is more common in healthcare than in other sectors. The design priority is swing control, uninterrupted passage, and zero interference with clinical workflow.

Baptist Health

Cre: Baptist Health

But Why Self Closing Is Not Preferred in This Situation

In healthcare and hospitals, every second matters. A self-closing function, while essential on fire doors, becomes an obstacle in fast-moving clinical areas.

Just imagine: A staff member is pushing a 250-lb emergency stretcher through a corridor. If every door is self-closing, the movement becomes a constant stop-and-push cycle—especially when the door pulls back at 3–5 seconds per close. Multiply that across multiple rooms, and you’ve added avoidable delay in a pathway where response time is the most critical.

A wide, fixed 120° opening allows:

  • Cleaner stretcher clearance
  • Reduced collision risks
  • Less physical strain for staff
  • Faster patient movement between rooms

The facility’s choice to avoid self-closing hinges is therefore consistent with clinical workflow demands. They need the door to stay neutral, not fight the user.

120 degree door stop

And Why Hold Open Is Not Required Either

Hold open door hinges sound helpful, but in real hospital operations, they introduce two issues:

1. Limited hold-open angle (often 85–95°)

When a door holds only at 90° door opening, the remaining clear width can violate ADA maneuvering needs for wheelchairs and carts—especially when transporting patients on stretchers, where every degree of swing impacts clearance.

2. Hold-open mechanisms can re-engage self-closing behavior

Many hold-open systems rely on detents or tension. When the door is nudged out of the hold-open angle—say from a stretcher bump—it disengages, and the door begins to swing back. In a high-traffic medical corridor, that unpredictability becomes a safety hazard.

The Baptist Health KY project needed a door that does not:

  • Close itself
  • Hold itself open at a fixed position

They needed a swing limiter—not a closer and not a holder.

120 degree door stop

When a 120° Door Stop Meets (and Exceeds) the Requirement

“We need them to just stop the door swing at 120 or 125.”

To meet that demand, the Waterson door stopper can be added directly to the hinge barrel. This add-on is engineered to:

  • Stop the swing at 120°
  • Prevent the door from over-rotating into the wall
  • Eliminate the need for external wall or floor stops
  • Maintain clean sightlines—especially important in clinical interiors
  • Provide a mechanical, non-closing, non-holding function

For applications where the door must open wide but stay controllable, this is often the most efficient door hardware choice.

door opening degrees

Any Other Solutions That Can Achieve a 120° Stopping Angle

You can meet a 120° stop in several ways:

A. Concealed overhead stops for projects that prioritize a clean aesthetic;
B. Wall or floor stops if the space allows for extra components;
C. Hinge-integrated stops when you want the control built directly into the hardware line.

However, when the goal is to maintain full clearance, avoid overhead hardware, and keep the entrance free of bulky components that could interfere with patient movement, a door stop on hinge remains the most reliable and safest choice. It keeps the opening clean, protects the wall, and provides a precise stopping angle without adding anything that disrupts clinical workflow.

door stop closer

Waterson Stainless Steel Door Stop on Hinge

For projects wanting hinge-integrated solutions, Waterson door stop on hinge delivers consistent stopping performance at 90° and 120°, designed for:

By embedding the stopping feature into the hinge line, the system removes the need for bulky or unsightly external stops, keeps the frame clear, and ensures the door stops exactly where the design requires.

Request For Information

Please note that Waterson Closer Hinges start from a size of 4″x4″. If you’re in need of smaller self-closing hinges, we’d recommend checking out some other resources! Also, we only provide single acting closer hinges. Thank you.

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