Office Design Steps

STEP TEN: ACCESSORIES AND OPTIONS

Let us know which of the following optional features you would like us to incorporate in your design:

A. Paneled cabinet sides: Choose from plain flat sides or optional flat panels or raised panels? (Barensfeld Office)

B. Desk Front and Doors: Raised panels or flat panels? (DiNapoli Office)

C. Decorative Carving Embellishments: Corbels, Capitals, Onlays, Ornate Moldings (Day Office, Little Office, McKinney Office, www.Enkeboll.com)

D. Cable trays to organize and hide wires

E. Grommets, for cable management (for cables to monitors, phones, facsimile machines, etc.)

F. Openings in cabinet backs to provide access to electrical power receptacles, cable receptacles and phone line receptacles.

G. Ventilation for CPU’s including hot air exhaust grilles and cool air intake openings (electric fans are optional

H. Retractable wooden keyboard tray, wide enough for your mouse, adjustable in height and angle. (Frank Wolf Office)

I. Wooden front, to hide the keyboard when it is retracted (with the appearance of a drawer front)

J. Printer tray, hidden behind a drawer front under the desktop level. (Tallerico Office)

K. Hidden shredder, on a sliding platform that retracts into the cabinetry. (Tallerico Office)

L. Surge Protector Power Outlets, incorporated in cabinets

M. Accommodation of HVAC registers, cold air return inlets, by means of in-cabinet ducting and/or decorative openings in cabinet baseboards.

N. Pocket doors (retractable doors) to hide the monitor when not in use. (Sandonato Office)

O. Breadboards for extra space for documents while working on the computer (Evans Hutch, McKinney Office)

P. Ventilation fan in CPU Cabinet

Q. Cable management features, including grommets, cable trays, built-in receptacles

R. Hidden lighting under hutches (over desktop or credenza)

S. Illumination of display areas (Nicholson Office)