Setting up a work area

I found  there is a significant difference between having a space to work in, versus  having a space that is ready to work in. My wife and I have been remodeling  our home, and the project resulted in my being displaced from work area. Now  we are down to one remaining room, and we decided it could be set up as a  combination gun/computer room in a way that wouldn’t detract from the  eventual sale of the home.

The  room definitely had some things working in it’s favor. It had been home to 7  – 8 Internet servers and had several circuits and upgraded electrical  service. It was well ventilated and central air cleaning, humidifying and  air conditioning service. The area was only 10.5′ x 10.5′, but it also had a  wide 5′ x 2′ closet with sliding doors and shelves to hold systems and  several wall mounted T1 circuits and routers. What needed to be done was the  same combination of refurbishment we had done in other rooms in the house:

    • Strip  room including baseboard molding and trim
    • Repair,  resurface and paint all walls
    • Resurface  and refinish hardwood floor
    • Install  new molding, trim and doors

The only  difference in this case was an opportunity to install some prefab and custom  work surfaces and storage areas, lighting and a small local area network for  systems. I thought I’d post a couple of installments of getting the area set  up as opposed to a dead web site for the next couple of weeks. 

Systems
Closet
Counter Space

The plan is to  use 2 – 3 24″ wide base cabinets under each section of the surrounding  counter tops (green) and leave at least one knee well at each wall. The cabinets  are 20″ deep and have adjustable shelves. I will use one steel lock up  for guns some number of overhead cabinets for storage. I think I will run 2  x 6 lumber through the planer and biscuit join and glue them. Should make a  good sturdy top for mounting a couple of presses and a clean smooth work  surface. 

This time I’d  like more permanent counter space to leave covered scales and trimmers out.  I thought I might try to set up a central electric motor power source for  tumblers, trimmers, case prep tools etc. Depends how compact and quiet of a  gear head motor I can come up with. Not sure yet.

I plan on  setting up my system data base for load info so it can be accessed through  the web site. Should make it a little easier to keep current and make more  load data available. Hopefully, the site will be running on a local server  before the room is complete.

This  has been my work area for the past couple of months while construction was  underway. There is room for one monitor and a single piece of paper, if I  place it perfectly perpendicular to the front edge of the keyboard.

It wouldn’t be  too bad, but it’s portable enough for people to occasionally move it to  another location and they don’t always wait until I’m not seated at the  desk. Fortunately, the chair has wheels.

The  floor’s in pretty bad shape, mostly from the wall to wall carpet that had  been in place for what must have been a very long time. The duct tape covers  a network line that ran along the floor through the active construction work  areas. The  mess of boxes and power outlets is actually a closet that acted as a systems  rack mount. Because it’s well ventilated, it will be used for the same  purpose.

This  pretty much represents the future. The pile of boxes of yet to be assembled cabinets  will eventually make up most of the new area. The Right to Bear Arms poster  will remain in a prominent spot on this anti-gun environment California  wall. Albert E on a bicycle – well, now there’s a guy who knew the value of  things that go really fast. Hopefully I’ll be back in a week with an update  and maybe some useful information on setting up a work area.

Thanks,
Joe

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