The barouche has a collapsible leather hood and fabric-covered padded seats.
From the sfgate.com
This carriage was also an open barouche drawn by four spanking bays.
From the thestate.com
Senior members of the Royal Family arrive in two barouche carriages.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Even those minor royals who all rated barouche Landaus last time poured from minibuses like superannuated tourists.
From the sacbee.com
The aristocracy would observe the competition from the exclusive royal enclosure, while others watched from their barouche carriages on the lawn.
From the edition.cnn.com
Bergman has treated each of these dilapidated vehicles as if it were the Queen's own royal barouche wheeling through the gates of Buckingham Palace.
From the time.com
More examples
A horse-drawn carriage having four wheels; has an outside seat for the driver and facing inside seats for two couples and a folding top
A barouche was a type of horse-drawn carriage fashionable in the 19th century. It was used mainly for travel in the summer, though it had a retractable cover for some protection from the weather. The barouche was based on an earlier style of carriage, the calash.
A four wheeled carriage with two seats facing one another.
Large open carriages of family capacity with a high box seat. Used from Regency to early Victorian times with four horses or a pair.