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Build Cubby Storage. Ree's pantry at The Lodge gives us so much storage inspo! By adding plenty of built-in cubby storage, you can easily stow all your cookware, dinnerware, and food items ...
Cubby-hole used by Benny Benson Modern cubby house designed for children's play [1] A cubby-hole, cubby-house or cubby is a small play house, or play area, for children. [2] This may be constructed by the children themselves and used as a place of play. [3] Children may have a small shed, play-house or tent which they use as a cubby-house. [4]
A pigeon-hole messagebox (commonly referred to as a pigeon-hole or pidge, a cubbyhole (often shortened to "cubby") or simply as a mailbox in some academic or office settings) is an internal mail system commonly used for communication in organisations, workplaces and educational institutes in the United Kingdom and other countries. Documents and ...
A gimlet is a hand tool for drilling small holes, mainly in wood, without splitting. It was defined in Joseph Gwilt's Architecture (1859) as "a piece of steel of a semi-cylindrical form, hollow on one side, having a cross handle at one end and a worm or screw at the other".
Pallet rack is a material handling storage aid system designed to store materials on pallets (or “skids”). Although there are many varieties of pallet racking, all types allow for the storage of palletized materials in horizontal rows with multiple levels. Forklift trucks are usually required to place the loaded pallets onto the racks for ...
Shipping container architecture is a form of architecture that uses steel intermodal containers (shipping containers) as the main structural element.It is also referred to as cargotecture or arkitainer, portmanteau words formed from "cargo" and "architecture".
A lumber room is a room, most often in the attic of a house, used for storing unused possessions such as furniture and other items the household has been "lumbered with", or accumulated over time.
The result was based on Nelson's CPS (Comprehensive Panel System), and featured "pods" of four cubicles arranged in a swastika pattern, each with an L-shaped desk and overhead storage. Surviving photos of the Federal Reserve Bank offices reveal a design that would not appear much different from a cubicle of today. [ 11 ]