The invention relates generally to the field of adjustable, wall-mounted shelving and storage systems.
Conventional adjustable, wall mounted shelving and storage systems typically comprise at least two, vertical standards mounted to a wall a predetermined distance apart, and at least one cantilevered bracket attached to each standard. A cantilevered bracket is attached to the standards by inserting one or more hooks, located on one end of the bracket, into slots formed in the standard. The hook can be formed using a tab with a notch in a bottom edge of the tab that fits over a bottom edge of a slot into which the tab is inserted. To make the positions of the shelves adjustable, each standard has a plurality of slots.
Although the cantilevered brackets are typically used to support shelves, they can also be used to support containers, such as wire baskets, mesh baskets, and plastic tubs positioned between the brackets, with a lip or other horizontally extending ledge surrounding the container resting on the brackets or on a frame mounted between the brackets. Furthermore, containers can be supported by a sliding frame to form a “hanging drawer,” which can be pulled out or extended.
For example, the DÉCOR drawer frame from Elfa International AB, is supported by two cantilevered brackets, which are attached to vertical standards mounted on a wall. The drawer frame comprises a wooden frame forming an opening into which a container is dropped. Examples of containers include wire baskets, mesh baskets, and plastic containers. The frame is mounted between two brackets with drawer slides to allow the frame with the container to be moved between retracted and extended positions.
Described below are various improvements and features to a drawer assembly and shelf for a wall-mounted storage system that enable it to be, if desired, assembled into a wide range of possible configurations and that enable installations to have, if desired, a substantially continuous front surface with a uniform finish for more easily blending with a home environment.
In a drawer frame having two side rails and a back rail for supporting a container, a feature of an exemplary embodiment of a drawer frame assembly for a wall mounted storage comprises a front bracket extending between and connecting to each of the two side rails capable of supporting drawer fronts extending across the front of the frame and having different standard heights, thus allowing the frame to be used with drawer fronts different heights that allow for containers of different depths to be used within the wall mounted storage system while also allowing the drawer assemblies to be placed adjacent to each other in a manner that creates, if desired, a uniform, relatively continuous appearance when installed.
According to another feature of this exemplary embodiment, a recess may be formed on the inside surface of a drawer front for accommodating a front lip of a container when inserted into the opening of the drawer frame having relatively thin front bracket, thereby giving the advantage, if desired, of reducing the required overall depth of the drawer assembly for a container of a give depth.
According to a different feature of this exemplary embodiment of a wall mounted storage system, the system includes shallow brackets for attaching to standards for supporting a shelf over a drawer assembly supported by brackets attached to the standard. The shallow brackets allow for a drawer assembly to be positioned on brackets immediately underneath the shelf, thereby reducing the space between the drawer assembly and the shelf and thus also the opportunity for users to overfill the container, which would put additional weight and stress on the system when installed. The closer spacing of the shelf and the drawer assembly also allows for standard drawer fronts to be used for the drawer assemblies wherever they are placed within an installation of the storage system, while permitting the use of a relative a small apron extending down from a front edge of the shelf to the top of a standard drawer front to give an installed system a continuously uniform appearance.
These and other features and advantages of an exemplary embodiment of a drawer assembly for a wall mounted storage system are described below.
In the following description, like numbers refer to like elements.
A wall-mounted storage system of the type illustrated in
To support a shelf, container or other structure for storing items, the system is assembled on the wall by attaching the standards to the wall, and connecting at least one cantilevered bracket to each standard at the same height. Each of the standards typically include regularly spaced slots, into which hooks or tabs located on the end of the brackets are inserted, to allow the brackets to be mounted or connected to the standard at a position based on the purposes for which the brackets will be used, the needs of the user or the space in which it is installed. The brackets may subsequently be moved and attached to different positions on the standards.
The non-limiting example illustrated in
Four, three-slot brackets 16 (the four instances are numbered 16a, 16b, 16c and 16d) and a two-slot bracket 18 (the one visible instance is numbered 18a) can be seen mounted or connected with standard 12a in
The wall-mounted storage system includes at least one type of drawer 20 with a standard (predetermined) width and length to allow a group or set of drawers to be easily grouped together as a set of vertically stacked drawers. For example, in the configuration shown in
A typical drawer slide suitable for mounting on a side of a drawer will include, for example, two complementary tracks. One track is attached to a side of the drawer and the other, complementary track is attached or supported on an adjacent bracket. In
The wall-mounted storage system may include more than one standard drawer type. Drawer 26 (the two instances of which in
Drawers 20 and 26 are intended to be examples of a modular approach to accommodating drawers of different depths having drawer fronts 34 and 36 that closely fit together to give the appearance of a continuous, uniform surface with a pleasing aesthetic. The depths of drawers are made to correspond to different numbers of positions on the standards. In this example, the relatively shallow drawers 20a-20d each requires 4 slots and thus occupies 4 positions on a standard. The deeper drawer requires 8 slots. Furthermore, a drawer type with a different standard width, but the same length (back to front) could be included in the wall-mounted storage system. Mixed width drawers could be accommodated by an installation with three or more standards, with the distances between the first and second corresponding to the first standard width, and the distance between the second and third standing corresponding to the second standard width.
As previously mentioned, the wall-mounted storage system may also include standard shallow brackets 18, the single, visible instance of which is numbered 18a in
Referring now also to
Each drawer 20 and 26 includes a container suspended from the frame to form a bottom and four sides of a drawer. Each of the drawers 20a-20d includes a container 38 of standard dimensions—width, length and height (or depth)—that is inserted into an opening in the drawer frame 32 of each of the drawers 20a-20d. Each drawer 26, which has a taller drawer front 36, can accommodate a container that is twice as deep. The containers for the wall mounted storage system, like the drawer frames, come in one or more standard dimensions. Each container has four sides, a bottom, and an open top. If more than one standard container is offered as in the wall-mounted storage system, the length (back to front) of each container is preferably the same. In this example, two containers of the same width are part of the wall-mounted storage system, one shallow and one deeper.
Each of the containers has a lip 40 or similar structure around at least a part of its outer periphery, near a top edge of the sides that define the opening, that allows the container to be dropped into and supported on the drawer frame 32. Although the lip extends continuously around the periphery of the container in the illustrated example, alternative embodiments need not have a continuous lip. A portion 42 of the lip may, optionally, be offset or raised from the frame to facilitate removal of the container from the frame. The walls and bottom of container 38 are solid, and made from plastic, wood or fabric. A container made of mesh or wire, or a combination of materials, could also be used.
Each drawer frame is comprised of two side rails 44, and back rail 46 and a front bracket 48 joined together to form a rectilinear shape with at least straight outside edges on the sides and inside edges defining center opening 49. The center opening has, in this example, a rectilinear shape formed by straight, inside top edges and surfaces of the side and back rails and front bracket. It has a standard or predetermined width and length, into which a container having a rectilinear shape can be dropped and supported. However, the drawer frame could, if desired, be formed without straight inside edges for supporting a container of a different or non-rectilinear shape. The side and back rails could be made of any solid material, including wood or plastic, but they are made of wood in the illustrated example.
The front bracket 48 of the drawer frame 32 has disposed at each end a right-angle support 50 (only one is visible in
Screws are used to attach the bracket 48 to the side rails, but other fasteners could be used. The drawer front 34 or 36 of the drawers are attached to the bracket 48 using screws or other fasteners. This allows standard dimensioned drawer fronts to be made in a range of materials and/or finishes and then easily attached to the drawer frame, either at the point of assembly of the drawer frame as a component for resale, or by a purchaser assembling a purchased drawer frame and drawer front. Using removable fasteners, such as screws, or other ways of removably-attaching the drawer fronts allows relatively easy retrofitting of a different drawer fronts if different finishes or materials are desired. The attachment points for the fasteners, such as the screws, may, if desired, be located inwardly of the side rails to allow for easier assembly.
The bracket 48 is, in a preferred embodiment, made of material that allows for it to be made thinner as measured along the Z-axis (front to back of the drawer) that is indicated in the coordinate frame next to the figure, than as compared to the side rails, and yet provide adequate strength. For aesthetic reasons, the side rails may be formed from the same or similar material wood, for example—as the drawer front. In a preferred embodiment, the bracket material is made of a metal. For example, it can be made from relatively thin sheet of metal so that it takes up little space, as measured along a Z-axis (front to back of the drawer), that has a height or dimension along the X-axis (bottom to top of the drawer) that gives sufficient strength to resist bending in that direction, as well as to resist torsional forces that might be, for example, exerted by a larger drawer front or pulling on the drawer front, and yet is small enough to allow attachment of a range of standard drawer front heights, from relatively small to relatively large, such as those exemplified by drawer fronts 34 and 36. The bracket 48 may, optionally, also include a flange or fold 52 that extends at a right angle from the bracket in the direction indicated by the Z-axis, toward the front of the drawer. Flange 52 gives additional strength to the metal bracket, helping it to resist bending in the Z-direction, front to back. The flange is also even with top surfaces 56 of side rails 44. It may support a lip of a container that is inserted into opening 49.
A recess 54 is milled or otherwise formed on a back side of drawer front 34 to accommodate a front lip to accommodate a front lip of a container when it is inserted into opening 49 and, if present, the flange 52. The recess 54 extends from the top of the drawer far enough, in the direction of the X-axis, to form either a ledge even with the top surfaces of rails 44 on which a lip of a container could rest or, as in this example, far enough to accommodate the flange 52. It preferably also has a width equal to that of the lip on the container that would be accommodated by the recesses. With the recess, the length of the drawer (measured along the Y-axis) is shorter and more compact.
The top surfaces of side rails 44, back rail 46, and metal bracket 48 are, in this example, straight and even with each other, forming a substantially continuous horizontal surface for supporting a container within the opening for allowing, if desired, the load from the container to be evenly distributed around the lip and the frame. However, the lip of the container need not continuously contact the all the top surfaces, or be continuous around the periphery of the container. The container could be, for example, supported (in contact with the drawer frame) only on the left and right sides, on the back and front sides, or partially on each of the sides. Furthermore, top surfaces of the rails and bracket need not be, in alternative embodiments straight and even, if the container is supported within the opening 50 in a stable position.
Each of the two side rails 44 preferably have straight outside surfaces, which are obscured in the figures, on which are mounted a track of a drawer slide that is used to mount the drawer to one of the cantilevered brackets 16. Only one track 22a is visible in
The width of the drawer fronts 34 and 36 preferably extend beyond the side rails 44 to cover or obscure the tracks 22a for the slides, or other mounting mechanism that allows for the draw to be extended or retracted, and to fit more closely with drawer fronts on adjacent drawers to create a set of drawers and shelves with clean and uniform look of solid wood or other material. The result can be seen best in
Each drawer front 34 and 36 extends from the frame 32, far enough downwardly, as indicated by dimension line 60 (
The foregoing description is of exemplary and preferred embodiments. The invention, as defined by the appended claims, is not limited to the described embodiments. Alterations and modifications to the disclosed embodiments may be made without departing from the invention. The meaning of the terms used in this specification are, unless expressly stated otherwise, intended to have ordinary and customary meaning and are not intended to be limited to the details of the illustrated or described structures or embodiments.
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