Simply measure the distance from the edge of the door to the the center of your doorknob. Most new locksets have bolts or latches that can accommodate both sizes. 3. If possible, remove the interior doorknob first – Make sure to release the springs holding the doorknob in position. Once this happens, removing the doorknob should be fairly easy. Depending how the doorknob is designed, you might have to remove the decorative cover first before you're able to access the springs on the doorknob. 4. Remove the screws that bind the interior section of the lock and the exterior section – Once these screws have been taken out of the way, you can pull each half of the lock away from the door. 5. Remove the latch plate and strike plate – It may be possible for you to keep the old latch plate and strike plate if the new lock you purchased is very similar. You will have to make a careful comparison beforehand to determine if the new plates are basically the same; if so, just keep the old plates in place, because removing and replacing the old screws will weaken their position in the door, or possibly strip the screw holes.
5 km street, mainly pedestrian, leading to Piazza del Popolo, the square defining the Villa Borghese area. Pantheon highlights Ideally, a visit to the Pantheon area would take a whole day and it might need a good map of the centre (maps of the area are also available for free at some kiosks) and comfortable shoes, even though public transportation links efficiently every part of the district to one another; but visiting the area by foot will not let you exclude any spot of it. Starting from Piazza Venezia and walking up through Via del Corso you will find Palazzo Doria Pamphilij on your right, a triumphal palace of the Renaissance housing the Modern Art Gallery of Rome, occupying the four main wings of the building, preserving many paintings from the modern era of Europe – Caravaggio's Repentant Mary Magdalene, dated 1595 or Velàzquez's Portrait of Pope Innocent X Pamphilij along with Jan van Scorel's Portrait of Agatha van Schoonhoven among many others. Proceeding along the Corso, you will reach the astonishing Piazza Colonna, with the historical Column of Marcus Aurelius, which gives access to the Montecitorio Square and the homonymous Palace, seat of the Italian Chamber of Deputies, designed by Gian Lorenzo Bernini and completed by architect Carlo Fontana in the XVII century.