enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Room divider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room_divider

    [1] [2] Room dividers are used by interior designers and architects as means to divide space into separate distinct areas. There are a number of different types of room dividers such as cubicle partitions, pipe and drape screens, shoji screens, and walls. Room dividers can be made from many materials, including wood, fabric, plexiglass, framed ...

  3. Capiz shell window - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capiz_shell_window

    Close-up of the panes of a capiz-shell window panel. In 19th-century Philippine colonial architecture, bahay na bato houses extensively used the capiz-shell window element. . Designed to take advantage of tropical cool breezes, these houses' large windows were built at least a meter high and as wide as five mete

  4. Curtain wall (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtain_wall_(architecture)

    A building project in Wuhan, China, demonstrating the relationship between the inner load-bearing structure and an exterior glass curtain wall Curtain walls are also used on residential structures. A curtain wall is an exterior covering of a building in which the outer walls are non-structural, instead serving to protect the interior of the ...

  5. Wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wall

    A partition wall is a usually thin wall that is used to separate or divide a room, primarily a pre-existing one. Partition walls are usually not load-bearing, and can be constructed out of many materials, including steel panels, bricks, cloth, plastic, plasterboard, wood, blocks of clay, terracotta, concrete, and glass. Some partition walls are ...

  6. Villavicencio-Marella House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villavicencio-Marella_House

    The walls of the entire house, including the second floor except the front, are built of adobe blocks. A wooden volada on the second floor fronting the street is walled with carved molave panels and wall-to-wall sliding capiz windows topped by multi-lobed exterior transoms, also of capiz. Above the upper window sills are decorative slats, where ...

  7. Architectural glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architectural_glass

    The glass floats on the tin, and levels out as it spreads along the bath, giving a smooth face to both sides. The glass cools and slowly solidifies as it travels over the molten tin and leaves the tin bath in a continuous ribbon. The glass is then annealed by cooling in an oven called a lehr. The finished product has near-perfect parallel surfaces.

  8. Sliding glass door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sliding_glass_door

    Another design, a wall-sized glass pocket door has one or more panels movable and sliding into wall pockets, completely disappearing for a 'wide open' indoor-outdoor room experience. The sliding glass door was introduced as a significant element of pre-war International style architecture in Europe and North America .

  9. Shoji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoji

    In modern construction, the shoji often do not form the exterior surface of the building; they sit inside a sliding glass door or window. [ 5 ] Shoji are valued for not setting a sharp barrier between the interior and the exterior; outside influences such as the swaying silhouettes of trees, or the chorus of frogs , can be appreciated from ...