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  2. Up-N-Away (down-sliding shower door) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Up-N-Away_(down-sliding...

    Up-N-Away was the name of a vertical-sliding bath/shower door manufactured by Unitspan Architectural Systems, Inc. The bathtub shower doors had vertical tracks instead of horizontal, and closed downward or opened upwards rather than sideways. The channel tracks were vertical on each side with only a low profile sill necessary across the front ...

  3. Sliding glass door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sliding_glass_door

    Swinging glass doors are a better choice than the typical sliding glass doors, since they offer a much tighter seal, [7] but glass – even the best type of glass, chosen according to the climate zone – is always a poor insulator, making doors based on them a poor choice from a thermal comfort perspective.

  4. Shower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shower

    A typical stall shower with height-adjustable nozzle and folding doors A combination shower and bathtub, with movable screen. A shower is a place in which a person bathes under a spray of typically warm or hot water. Indoors, there is a drain in the floor. Most showers are set up to have adjustable temperature, spray pressure and showerhead ...

  5. Door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Door

    It is a door with lites where all or some panels would be in a casement door. A French door traditionally has a moulded panel at the bottom of the door. It is called a French window when used in a pair as double-leaved doors with large glass panels in each door leaf, and in which the doors may swing out (typically) as well as in.

  6. Door frame - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Door_frame

    One elaborate kind of door surround is the Gibbs surround, which is a type of banded "rusticated" architectural frame surrounding a door, window or niche in the tradition of classical architecture. The term surround may be used to refer to just an ornamental border which encircles the sides and top of a door frame, [ 1 ] or it may refer to the ...

  7. Shoji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoji

    The innermost doors and outermost doors overlap fully; note that in the single-layer ranma above, the light is brighter, and the silhouette of the visitor stooping for her bag sharper. Top: katabiki shoji, on interior rails, slides in front of the wall.