When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: rough opening for sliding bypass doors for closets exterior images

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sliding door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sliding_door

    Sliding doors are commonly found as store, hotel, and office entrances, used in elevators, and used as patio doors, closet doors and room dividers. [7] Sliding doors are also used in transportation, such as in vans and both overground and underground trains. Volkswagen used these doors in the Volkswagen Fridolin produced between 1964 and 1974.

  3. Sliding glass door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sliding_glass_door

    Sliding glass door frames are often made from wood, aluminum, stainless steel, or steel, which also have the most strength. The most common material is PVC plastic. Replacement parts are most commonly needed for the moving-sliding parts of the door, such as the steel rollers that glide within the track and the locking mechanisms.

  4. Door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Door

    A pet door (also known as a cat flap or dog door) is an opening in a door to allow pets to enter and exit without the main door's being opened. It may be simply covered by a rubber flap, or it may be an actual door hinged on the top that the pet can push through. Pet doors may be mounted in a sliding glass door as a new (permanent or temporary ...

  5. Walk-in closet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walk-in_closet

    A walk-in closet (North American) or walk-in wardrobe or dressing room [1] [2] is typically a large closet, wardrobe or room that is primarily intended for storing clothes, footwear etc., and being used as a changing room. [3] As the name suggests, walk-in closets are closets sufficiently big as to allow one to walk into them to browse through ...

  6. Shoji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoji

    Shoji are very lightweight, so they are easily slid aside, or taken off their tracks and stored in a closet, opening the room to other rooms or the outside. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] [ 6 ] Fully traditional buildings may have only one large room, under a roof supported by a post-and-lintel frame, with few or no permanent interior or exterior walls; the space ...

  7. Plug door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plug_door

    The MVG Class A of the Munich U-Bahn uses sliding plug doors.. Many passenger trains in the world use sliding plug doors: early examples of passenger trains using plug doors include the MVG Class A of the Munich U-Bahn from 1967, [3] the first batch of trains for Line 2 of the Milan Metro from 1970, [4] and the DT1 of the Nuremberg U-Bahn, also from 1970.