Vis-à-vis is one of the five seating arrangements of
carriages. is French for "face to face", and these carriages are four-wheeled and hold four passengers. There are two crosswise seats in the body, with two people seated in the rear facing forward, and two seated in the front facing rearward, so that passengers sit face-to-face with each other. Such a seating arrangement is the most common seen in tourist carriages, regardless of actual carriage type, because they carry many passengers in a social setting, with easy entry, a good view, and independent seating for the
coachman up front. In the
wagonette seating arrangement, passengers also sit face-to-face, but the seating is longitudinal instead of crosswise (passengers travel sideways), and it is
not called a vis-à-vis. Several carriage types have vis-à-vis seating arrangements, such as the
Barouche,
Karozzin,
Landau, and
Sociable. All
coaches have vis-à-vis seating arrangements; examples include the
Berlin and
Clarence. == The vis-à-vis carriage ==