The new productivity desk
We needed some more benchspace in the new OrganicDesign office, but resources are very restricted at the moment. Luckily it happened to be the inorganic rubish collection the same week we were moving to the new place, and we were able to find some perfectly usable melteca panels which could be used to make a desk about three meters long! as usual I documented the construction procedure :-)
For any project to come to a successful conclusion, a proper process of planning must be carried out. Usually this involves drawings with numbers on them as in the following architectural drawings used to construct our new desk.
After the planning phase is complete, the materials should be assembled together and a good work surface should be prepared and an area with all the required tools within handy reach.
The first thing done was then to use a jig saw to cut all the pieces into the sizes defined in the plan.
The plan was to create three sturdy legs which would hold up the main desk surface. Each leg is composed of to 70cm pieces of wood screwed together at perpendicular angles as shown here by my trusty assistant :-) Each of these 70cm parts then has a base and top panel screwed on to it. Rather than engaging in difficult measuring procedures, I simply placed the leg onto the panel, traced around it and drilled holes through it. To ensure that the holes line up nicely, one can be drilled into the end of the leg first and then the other leg holes drilled after the first screw is in place as shown below.
Here's a completed leg and then the others in position and ready to be screwed into the bottom of the desk surface.
Finished and in use!
Here a visiting IT professional is testing the desk by using it to generate productivity on the Internet :-)