Title: Merge example.com/wp with example.com
Last modified: July 22, 2018

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# Merge example.com/wp with example.com

 *  [hgovernick](https://wordpress.org/support/users/hgovernick/)
 * (@hgovernick)
 * [7 years, 10 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/merge-example-com-wp-with-example-com/)
 * Hello Forum,
    My first post here, hope it’s at the right place.
 * I have a static site I built at theatrgroup.com in 1996. It has a very high ranking
   with search engines when searching “method acting” or related searches. But it’s
   not RESPONSIVE, so I would like to install WordPress in theatrgroup.com/wp with
   the intention of attempting to merge the newly created WordPress site with the
   existing static site.
 * I would like to do this in such a way that there would be no down time at the
   main static site, and without losing my standing with the search engines.
 * I thought of just creating theatrgroup.com/wp and adding a link from the static
   theatrgroup.com to the newly created WordPress version, but if I’m not mistaken,
   Google and others don’t appreciate multiple sites with identical content.
 * Is what I want to do even possible?
 * Thank you,

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)

 *  Moderator [Jan Dembowski](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jdembowski/)
 * (@jdembowski)
 * Forum Moderator and Brute Squad
 * [7 years, 10 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/merge-example-com-wp-with-example-com/#post-10516653)
 * > My first post here, hope it’s at the right place.
 * It’s not but I moved it. 😉
 * > I have a static site I built at theatrgroup.com in 1996.
 * Cool.
 * > so I would like to install WordPress in theatrgroup.com/wp with the intention
   > of attempting to merge the newly created WordPress site with the existing static
   > site.
 * That would work and is not a bad idea. To avoid any duplicate content, once you’ve
   moves an article or URL to the new WordPress URL then 301 the old one to the 
   new.
 * The search engines will see that redirect and adjust. Eventually the old URL 
   will fall off the map in those search results.
 * How many old URLs do you have? If it’s not many then a `.htaccess` redirect would
   be the easiest way to handle that.
    -  This reply was modified 7 years, 10 months ago by [Jan Dembowski](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jdembowski/).
      Reason: Fixed grammar
 *  [Joy](https://wordpress.org/support/users/joyously/)
 * (@joyously)
 * [7 years, 10 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/merge-example-com-wp-with-example-com/#post-10516698)
 * You can put a WordPress in a subdirectory, and have it control the root. So you
   install it and copy the content of your static pages into the new pages, and 
   then test it all. Then follow the instructions linked on the Settings > General
   page for “want your site home page to be different from your WordPress installation
   directory.”
    [https://codex.wordpress.org/Giving_WordPress_Its_Own_Directory](https://codex.wordpress.org/Giving_WordPress_Its_Own_Directory)
   I’ve done it many times… it’s easy. You will only need redirects if you don’t
   make the same structure for the new pages.
 *  Thread Starter [hgovernick](https://wordpress.org/support/users/hgovernick/)
 * (@hgovernick)
 * [7 years, 10 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/merge-example-com-wp-with-example-com/#post-10517687)
 * Thank you for the helpful responses.
 * There’s only one reply form here, so I’m not sure which response I’m replying
   to, so I’ll reply to both here.
 * In answer to the first response from Jan, thanks for moving me to the proper 
   forum. I have almost 100 URLs at my static site. I’ve never used .htaccess redirect
   so I’d have to study up on that procedure.
 * In answer to the second response from Joy, I’ve read thoroughly the information
   found at the link you provided. Very helpful. It led me to consider a third option
   if possible, but I need to know the answer to this question:
 * Q: Could I install WordPress into the public_html directory containing my existing
   static site without removing the existing site? If so, I could leave the static
   site up to maintain search engine optimization and place button links on the 
   static pages leading tablet / phone visitors to the WordPress version of the 
   site, which is responsive.
 * Sorry it took so long to answer here, but I didn’t receive an email alerting 
   me of your responses. I’ll have to make sure I’ve configured my preferences.
 * Much appreciated, and many thanks.
 *  Moderator [Jan Dembowski](https://wordpress.org/support/users/jdembowski/)
 * (@jdembowski)
 * Forum Moderator and Brute Squad
 * [7 years, 10 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/merge-example-com-wp-with-example-com/#post-10518725)
 * > Could I install WordPress into the public_html directory containing my existing
   > static site without removing the existing site?
 * If it’s the same URL, while it could _technically_ work or be made to work, troubleshooting
   it would be not fun. If you can put the new WordPress installation in a separate
   directory and 301 the old posts there, either one at a time or wholesale, then
   you’ll have a better time of it.
 *  Thread Starter [hgovernick](https://wordpress.org/support/users/hgovernick/)
 * (@hgovernick)
 * [7 years, 10 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/merge-example-com-wp-with-example-com/#post-10519737)
 * Thank you for your suggestions. You’ve been very helpful.

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)

The topic ‘Merge example.com/wp with example.com’ is closed to new replies.

 * In: [Fixing WordPress](https://wordpress.org/support/forum/how-to-and-troubleshooting/)
 * 5 replies
 * 3 participants
 * Last reply from: [hgovernick](https://wordpress.org/support/users/hgovernick/)
 * Last activity: [7 years, 10 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/merge-example-com-wp-with-example-com/#post-10519737)
 * Status: not resolved

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