That's how big the "moveable" panel on wheels would need to be on the right there!
  (unless I bring the superchunk down a few more inches to cover the top of the door frame) Also, I made it rectangular since a triangular superchunk will always be in the way of the path there even if you scoot it around (and that doorway will be used often).  I figure with more of a rectangular construction, it can at least sit flush to that right wall when I need it to. I'm going to play around with some angles though as I can probably make a hybrid type shape to serve both purposes a bit better. However, it still won't match the insulation depth of the opposite corner superchunk, but it will hopefully match the performance enough to keep things somewhat symmetrical in the lows (though Stuart said it wasn't as necessary on the rear wall).This arrangement seems more doable to me than hangers (not sure what the performance difference would be between the two though...). I just don't know how I would work with those in any kind of symmetry considering the door and the fireplace. I would need a lot of blueprints to understand how to properly frame these into the room when I'm building. That part of this whole process is a mystery to me at this point as I have very little experience. BUT I'm a quick learner and know I could pull it off with the correct understanding/blueprints. Again, maybe I just need to pay Stuart!
Cheers!
Trevor

 Also, that makes sense now about the vertical plane needing an "I" shaped bar of some kind to keep it from getting out of whack.