There may be a way, but there are caveats. First off, I have never seen a couch that perfectly resembles a box or a crate, so there will be some points on the width or height that are probably not as wide as the strict HxWxD dimensions you give. Secondly, I have moved more than my fair share of couches, and I have used a trick to the process that might help. If there is a good bit of room on either side of the door on both sides of the wall, you can lift the couch and tip it up at an angle from the floor, much like you were lifting it from the back and leaving the front on the floor. This can make the couch a bit narrower than the width and depth dimensions you gave above. Then you can angle the lifted couch through the door along the "outside" wall, still holding it at the topped forward angle, put the wider arm through first, and then swing the couch out straight through the door to proceed. As you get to the other end, you would turn again along the "inside" wall to get the trailing couch arm through. However, if you have walls in the way, that may not work, such as a deep foyer. A friend and I had to abandon such an effort once, due to a long hallway that wouldn't let us swing the couch. It will depend on the length of the couch as compared to the wall face, how much swing room you have, and how much the actual arm of the couch sticks out based on its shape. Also, on some couches, there are legs attached to the bottom, often being screwed into the couch frame. If so, these type can be screwed off to give you a little more clearance through the door. Sometimes inches count. Good luck!
yes
4
No
It should slide through if you run the 86 cm side through the door first. This assumes that it is not too tall to go through the door. 86 cm is .86 meters which is less than the .97 meter opening.
No it will not fit through. The door can only take something that is 36 inches or smaller and there is no dimension on the couch that small.
You need to provide more dimensions, like the length, the height of the arms, and the depth of the arms.
You will probably have to remove the legs/feet and turn it diagonally to make it fit through the door. The frame of the couch is bolted to the bottom, there are two recliners. Can the sofa be tilted at an angle that will get it through the 30" doorway?
Measure it in the store to ensure it will fit through the door.
It depends on the size of the paper and the size of the locker door. A standard letter-size piece of paper (8.5 x 11 inches) will likely fit on a standard size locker door, but larger papers may not fit.
That is the lowest standard size for a swinging door. Patio doors are a couple inches shorter. You can have a door made to fit a shorter opening. It is usually better to raise the header to fit the standard door.
If they were one-piece they wouldn't fit through a standard door opening.
It takes about four weeks to go from couch to cross fit.
Yes, If you can fit a pen or pencil under your door a MOUSE could fit through. Please be aware of this danger. NOOOOO
There may be a way, but there are caveats. First off, I have never seen a couch that perfectly resembles a box or a crate, so there will be some points on the width or height that are probably not as wide as the strict HxWxD dimensions you give. Secondly, I have moved more than my fair share of couches, and I have used a trick to the process that might help. If there is a good bit of room on either side of the door on both sides of the wall, you can lift the couch and tip it up at an angle from the floor, much like you were lifting it from the back and leaving the front on the floor. This can make the couch a bit narrower than the width and depth dimensions you gave above. Then you can angle the lifted couch through the door along the "outside" wall, still holding it at the topped forward angle, put the wider arm through first, and then swing the couch out straight through the door to proceed. As you get to the other end, you would turn again along the "inside" wall to get the trailing couch arm through. However, if you have walls in the way, that may not work, such as a deep foyer. A friend and I had to abandon such an effort once, due to a long hallway that wouldn't let us swing the couch. It will depend on the length of the couch as compared to the wall face, how much swing room you have, and how much the actual arm of the couch sticks out based on its shape. Also, on some couches, there are legs attached to the bottom, often being screwed into the couch frame. If so, these type can be screwed off to give you a little more clearance through the door. Sometimes inches count. Good luck!
NO.
yes