![]() ![]() ![]() Corporate Engagement & International Relations (CEIRD).Sam Nujoma Marine & Coastal Resources Research Centre.Quality Assurance and Management (CEQUAM).Centre for Innovation in Learning and Teaching (CILT).Grants Management and Resource Mobilization.Faculty of Health Sciences & Veterinary Medicine.School of Humanities, Society & Development.School of Business Management, Governance & Economics.School of Engineering & the Built Environment.School of Agriculture & Fisheries Sciences.Faculty of Agriculture, Engineering & Natural Sciences.Online Support for Distance Education/Part-time Studies.Distance/Part-time Postgraduate Programmes.Distance/Part-time Undergraduate Programmes.Distance Education/Part-time Requirements.But but the budget might overrule replacement. Put labels on the visible side to give an indication of contents (I often don't need to know that "A" and "B" are in a given container as I can usually remember that they were with "X" or "Y" - and so long as I can quickly find the containers holding "X" and "Y", I will usually find the object of my search.) Colour coding - YEP! You have expressed an ideal approach (IMO) so follow through with that. I have found "containerising" stuff to be very effective - utilising containers of consistent sizes which enable stacking. Either way, there will be greater discipline in how you act - so I suggest you work on a storage scheme which can achieve that. Being forced to organise the accumulation due to not having the storage space to put it is going to mean throwing potentially useful stuff out (there's an ominously familiar tone in that thought) and/or spending time you don't have to perform the organisation when you need to. It's going to accumulate anyway, so having shelving will give it a place to live that isn't all over the floor. I, too was concerned at your intention to reduce shelving on the long benches to reduce junk accumulation. unless you were thinking of the two middle shelves holding things that only took half the shelf depth and were set back to back (like component drawers, for example). Also thought of this arrangement for the side wall shelving. Could be distracting if people are walking down there while you're shooting. Certainly I would not locate such a spot right near the main door/corridor. The triangular mailbag area doesn't feel right. I'm tending to agree with several of the comments here. The area inside the door to the right (your proposed mailbag area) is a good 3D printer area if that's going to become a bigger thing.David II is right, the soldering/camera room is likely a good idea, and you can place all of your microscope, soldering and SMT oven stuff in there.Put power strips (ziptied) to the bottom of the Ikea bench shelves at the back.I think you'll probably need 2 sets of equipment shelves behind the benches, but not all three.They're available in nice 2, 4, 6" widths, cheap as dirt, and great for holding parts, and have the shelves the minimum distance apart On the shelves, standard cardboard bin-boxes are your friend.Also the shelves are easily painted with some metal paint. That layout gives you wider access to the shelves, and the same density, plus if you have a really big item that's more than a shelf deep you can still store it.(see attach). The shelves on the back wall, at 90 to the wall, should go shelf, gap, shelf, shelf, gap, shelf, and put one at 90 degrees to the middle of the back to back ones, which you can use for mailbag backdrop.One big bench in the middle, that's where mailbag should be as well. ![]()
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