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  2. List of furniture types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_furniture_types

    Door furniture; Hutch; Park furniture (such as benches and picnic tables) Stadium seating; Street furniture; Sword furniture – on Japanese swords (katana, wakizashi, tantō) all parts save the blade are referred to as "furniture". In firearms, parts aside from the action and barrel, such as the grip, stock, butt, and comb.

  3. Door furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Door_furniture

    Design of door furniture is an issue to disabled persons who might have difficulty opening or using some kinds of door, and to specialists in interior design as well as those usability professionals which often take their didactic examples from door furniture design and use. [1] Items of door furniture fall into several categories, described below.

  4. Bedroom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bedroom

    In larger Victorian houses it was common to have accessible from the bedroom a boudoir for the lady of the house and a dressing room for the gentleman. [2] Attic bedrooms exist in some houses; since they are only separated from the outside air by the roof they are typically cold in winter and may be too hot in summer. The slope of the rafters ...

  5. Folding door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folding_door

    A folding door is a type of door which opens by folding back in sections or so-called panels. Folding doors are also known as 'bi-fold doors', in spite of them most often having more than two panels. Another term is 'concertina' doors, inspired by the musical instrument of the same name.

  6. Door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Door

    A sliding glass door, sometimes called an Arcadia door or patio door, is a door made of glass that slides open and sometimes has a screen (a removable metal mesh that covers the door). Australian doors are a pair of plywood swinging doors often found in Australian public houses.

  7. Willis Tower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willis_Tower

    This feeling was confirmed in a July 16, 2009, CNN article in which some Chicago-area residents expressed reluctance to accept the Willis Tower name, [199] and in an article that appeared in the October 2010 issue of Chicago magazine that ranked the building among Chicago's 40 most important, the author pointedly refused to acknowledge the name ...

  8. Fortress of Solitude - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortress_of_Solitude

    Superheroes gather inside the Fortress of Solitude in Justice, art by Alex Ross.. In John Byrne's 1986 Man of Steel miniseries, which re-wrote various aspects of the Superman mythos, the Clark Kent persona was described as a "Fortress of Solitude", in that it allowed him to live as the ordinary person he saw himself as and leave the world-famous superhero behind.

  9. Sainte-Chapelle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sainte-Chapelle

    The Sainte-Chapelle (French: [sɛ̃t ʃapɛl]; English: Holy Chapel) is a royal chapel in the Gothic style, within the medieval Palais de la Cité, the residence of the Kings of France until the 14th century, on the Île de la Cité in the River Seine in Paris, France.