1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to furniture which, once assembled, can be positioned in more than one position to allow it to have different purposes. In particular, the piece of furniture is designed to support multiple different sizes of objects without modification to its structure when switching between positions and objects it supports.
2. Description of the Related Art
Furniture generally is designed to have a single configuration or placement once it has been assembled and is customized for its purpose with that configuration and placement in mind. For example, most bookshelves are designed to stand upright with an obvious top and bottom and they would not function and/or would have an undesirable appearance if positioned in an alternative position. For example, a bookshelf placed on its side is generally unable to support books in a reasonable fashion, and, if placed upside down, is generally not stable or attractive as it will often have small legs or feet which may now be sticking up.
There are some pieces of furniture which are essentially blocks having no real upside-down or right-side-up configuration to provide for ease of use. For example, a bookshelf may not have an obvious top or bottom as both end pieces may be simple boards of identical shape and size. While these provide for some flexibility in installation, these pieces of furniture do not truly provide for an alternative position. Instead, they actually only provide a single option for positioning, but allow for multiple ways of obtaining it. In effect, there is no difference between the positions in which this kind of furniture can be placed, e.g., the bookshelf may be identical if it is right-side-up or upside-down.
A piece of furniture with multiple purposes can be particularly valuable. For a consumer, it can allow them to adapt the furniture to a changing lifestyle and for a retailer, it can allow them to increase the types of furniture they have available for sale without need to take up additional valuable display or storage space. For example, if a single piece of furniture can function as two different pieces in different configurations, it allows the retailer to stock only a single piece of inventory to fill two needs and for a consumer to purchase a single piece regardless of whether the consumer needs either, or both, of the alternatives.
There are, for example, certain types of furniture which provide for different purposes by allowing for the addition or removal of certain components to switch between configurations. For example, baby cribs can often be modified into toddler beds through the removal of one or more of the sides of the crib and the replacement of that side with a shorter part-wall that still supports the remaining crib walls but allows a toddler to safely climb in and out. While this type of modification is common, it is less than ideal for a number of reasons. Firstly, it generally requires the end consumer to at least partially disassemble the piece of furniture (which can often require them to locate specialized tools for assembly that came with the furniture) and it requires the consumer to store the parts of the unused configuration somewhere when the consumer is not using these parts. As these parts are often heavy and bulky, this can present its own challenges.
The following is a summary of the invention, which should provide to the reader a basic understanding of some aspects of the invention. This summary is not intended to identify critical elements of the invention or in any way to delineate the scope of the invention. The sole purpose of this summary is to present in simplified text some aspects of the invention as a prelude to the more detailed description presented below.
There are described herein, pieces of furniture which have what is termed a “reversible configuration.” The piece of furniture has a single configuration of parts, but that configuration allows for two different positions into which it may be placed and those positions provide different functionality from each other. Thus, the furniture has two different uses, but switching between the uses simply requires placing the piece of furniture in a different arrangement instead of removing or adding parts or moving parts relative to each other. Specifically, the piece of furniture is generally “flipped-over” to switch between arrangements.
There is described herein, in an embodiment, a piece of furniture comprising: a central body structure having side panels and a volume at least partially enclosed by said side panels; a generally planar first table having a first size attached via a major surface to said side panels at a first end of said side panels; and a generally planar second table having a second size attached via a major surface to said side panels at a second end of said side panels, said second end being at a position opposing said first end so that said central body structure interconnects said first table and said second table; wherein said first size and said second size are different; and wherein said piece of furniture is configured to rest on either said first table or said second table, but not on both simultaneously.
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture, the first size and said second size are each an area of a major surface of said first table and said second table.
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture, the first size and said second size are each a shape of said first table and said second table.
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture, the first table and said second table have identical surface area of a major surface.
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture, the first size and said second size are each specific dimensions said first table and said second table.
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture, the first table and said second table have identical surface area of a major surface.
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture, the volume is not completely enclosed by said side panels, said first table, and said second table.
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture, the volume is completely enclosed by said side panels, said first table, and said second table.
In an embodiment, the piece of furniture further comprises a rear panel at least partially enclosing said volume.
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture, the volume is not completely enclosed by said side panels, said rear panel, said first table, and said second table.
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture, the volume is completely enclosed by said side panels, said rear panel, said first table, and said second table.
In an embodiment, the piece of furniture further comprises a shelf located within said volume.
In an embodiment, the piece of furniture further comprises a cabinet located within said volume.
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture, the side panels are all interchangeable.
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture, the piece of furniture is an aquarium stand.
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture, the first table is configured to support a ten-gallon aquarium and said second table is configured to support a twenty-gallon aquarium.
The embodiment of the piece of furniture (100) shown in
The shape of the central body structure (101) shown in
In the embodiment of
It should be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that, while
In an embodiment of the piece of furniture (101), no further structure other than at least the side walls (115) and (117) (and these may be co-formed such as in the horizontal cylinder scenario above) need be present to form a central body structure (101). However, the structure shown in
In the embodiment of
As can be seen in the embodiment of
As is best seen in
The tables (121) and (123), in the depicted embodiment, are generally rectangular and planar, but that is not required and the tables (121) and (123) may be of any generally planar shape including rectangles, squares, circles, or other polygons. Each table (121) and (123) will generally have a generally flat upper surface where the upper surface is defined as the surface comparing the two major surfaces of each of the tables (121) or (123) positioned furthest from the central body structure (101), as can be best seen in
Generally, the different sizing of the tables (121) and (123) will be manifested by the tables (121) and (123) being the same generally shape but having different surface areas by extending one of the tables (121) or (123) in one dimension, as shown in the embodiment of
Having the two tables (121) and (123) be of different size provides for the piece of furniture to be used on two different arrangements, as shown in
In use, the furniture (100) will generally be purchased and assembled as necessary. The consumer or user will place it (arrange it) based on which surface (151) or (153) they want to use as the surface upon which to place objects. This selection will generally be dependent on the size of specific other objects as the piece of furniture contemplated herein is primarily designed to act as a stand or support for other objects. Selection is made by simply flipping the piece of furniture over to obtain a piece of furniture suitable for, and often specialized for, a different task.
In the depicted example of
Aquariums are generally very heavy once filled with water, and one does not want to have an aquarium that is not well supported, as this can result in a hazard as well as a risk of loss of the aquarium. Stands for aquariums are often sized for a specific size of aquarium to provide good support as aquariums are generally of standard sizes and configurations. Having a table which is too large or too small can present a situation where the stand is more likely to be knocked over than having a stand correctly sized. The present piece of furniture can provide good support, and can be sized and shaped to support two different sizes of aquarium, such as those of standard 20 and 10 gallon parallelepiped configuration, as shown in
It should be apparent that the piece of furniture (100) is not intended to be modified between one arrangement to the other. Rather, it is simply turned over (with the original table (121) or (123) that was the top now being the base and vice versa). This is best illustrated by comparing
While the figures shown herein particularly focus on a piece of furniture (100) primarily for use as an aquarium stand for two differently sized aquariums which is designed to rotate 180 degrees to reach a different arrangement, this is by no means required. In an alternative embodiment of the invention, the stand can rotate 90 degrees (in any direction) or could rotate some other amount depending on its shape (e.g. if it was not a parallelepiped). Further, while the stand in the present figures is designed to have two configurations, an alternative embodiment of the invention could have 3 or more configurations depending on which surface was used as a base. For example, the furniture (100) could include three or more tables with the three or more tables arranged at equal rotations around the center body structure (101). However, in such an embodiment, the tables would still be differently sized from each other.
Still further, an alternative embodiment of the invention could be a piece of furniture that is not an aquarium stand. It may be instead, but is not limited to, a bookcase, a chair, a table, a television or media stand, a bureau, a dresser, a chest of drawers, a cabinet, a crib or bed, or a stand designed to support multiple different types of objects.
While the invention has been disclosed in conjunction with a description of certain embodiments, including those that are currently believed to be the preferred embodiments, the detailed description is intended to be illustrative and should not be understood to limit the scope of the present disclosure. As would be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art, embodiments other than those described in detail herein are encompassed by the present invention. Modifications and variations of the described embodiments may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
It will further be understood that any of the ranges, values, properties, or characteristics given for any single component of the present disclosure can be used interchangeably with any ranges, values, properties, or characteristics given for any of the other components of the disclosure, where compatible, to form an embodiment having defined values for each of the components, as given herein throughout. Further, ranges provided for a genus or a category can also be applied to species within the genus or members of the category unless otherwise noted.
This application is a Continuation-In-Part (CIP) of U.S. Utility patent application Ser. No. 14/859,879, filed Sep. 21, 2015, which in turn claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/052,925, filed Sep. 19, 2014. The entire disclosure of both the above documents is herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62052925 | Sep 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14859879 | Sep 2015 | US |
Child | 14938594 | US |