Many of the modular display units that are presently available in retail stores are support shelf members or other display members that are arranged in a flat, horizontal position. One type of modular display unit commonly used in convenience stores, grocery stores, hardware stores, and other retail stores is known as a gondola shelving unit or system. Gondola shelving systems are in high demand among retailers because of their functionality and versatility. Gondola shelving is freestanding shelving that typically consists of a flat base and a plurality of vertical upright support members attached thereto which can be fitted with apertures, sleeves, hooks, or other means for receiving and engaging horizontal shelving at various user-customizable heights. Gondola shelving placed end-to-end can form multiple rows of shelving, for example, in store aisles. Standalone gondola shelving units tend to be used for special themed displays, for example, at the end of a store aisle.
Gravity feed type display devices are also in high demand in today's mass merchandising market. Gravity feed type display devices feature shelving that is downwardly sloped such that products may slide down the shelving to the front of the unit without assistance from a store employee or customer. Gravity feed type shelving systems help retail stores promote sales because the shelving systems continuously supply products and make the products readily available and easily accessible to a customer at a front portion of the shelving systems. This allows a store employee or customer to easily remove a product from the shelf and not have to reach deeply into the shelf to remove products. Such gravity feed devices also increase the visibility of products because the products are always replenished at the front portion of the shelf where they are easily viewed by a customer passing by.
Typically the gondola shelving units used in retail stores are not in gravity feed orientation. A variety of devices for converting the existing non-gravity feed type gondola shelving display devices to gravity feed systems have been developed. Several of those existing devices include angular or wedge shaped members, or other support bracket arrangements which may be positioned on an existing horizontal shelf surface or attached in some fashion to the rear portion of a non-gravity feed type unit. Those existing devices may cause one end portion of the shelf member to be elevated so as to create an inclined surface and convert existing horizontal display units into gravity feed type systems. See, for example, the conversion systems disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,205,421 and 4,872,567.
However, the existing conversion devices suffer from certain disadvantages and shortcomings. For example, a reduction in usable space between vertically spaced shelf members occurs with conversion devices that retain the original horizontal shelf member and add thereto an overlaying shelf member which is freestanding or supported by any sort of supporting device. Such conversion devices are likewise complex and may further lack stability and strength as they are not structurally integrated or connected to components of the modular display unit itself. The conversion devices may further be subject to being dislodged or bumped out of position during stocking or when a customer grabs merchandise from the converted shelf member.
The existing conversion devices fail to disclose an efficient, effective and stable means for converting standard gondola shelving systems to gravity feed type shelving systems. Similarly, none of the existing conversion devices disclose the use of a conversion system that when properly positioned and arranged with a shelf member peimits a plurality of horizontally disposed shelf members to be easily and quickly converted to a gravity feed system while maintaining a stable, unitized, and vertically aligned system.
The present invention relates to a gravity feed conversion bracket system for converting a standard gondola shelving system to a gravity feed shelving system. The system includes a left bracket member and a right bracket member, wherein each of the left bracket member and the right bracket member may be selectively engageable with an existing vertical upright support member associated with a typical gondola shelving system. The left bracket member and right bracket member may also each be selectively engageable with a shelving member associated with a standard gondola shelving system.
The left bracket member and right bracket member each include a plurality of receiver members that are positioned and located on a front wall surface respectively thereof that is angularly oriented relative to a vertical plane or relative to the vertical upright support members of the gondola system, the receiver members being adapted to receive and engage attachment members associated with the shelving members of a standard gondola shelving unit. The left bracket member and the right bracket member are each also selectively engaged with a vertical upright support member of a standard gondola shelving system through the use of a plurality of engaging members, and when the left and right bracket members are selectively engaged with the attachment members of a gondola shelving member, the angularly oriented front wall surface of each bracket member automatically positions the attached shelving member in a gravity feed orientation.
When a user would like to convert multiple gondola shelving units that are positioned and located adjacent to one another into gravity feed units, the system may also include at least one center bracket member. The center bracket member may also be selectively engageable with a vertical upright support member and a shelving member associated with a standard gondola shelving system. The center bracket member includes a plurality of receiver members positioned and located on a front wall surface, each receiver member being wider than those associated with the left and right bracket members, as well as a plurality of engaging members for engaging a vertical upright support member of a typical gondola system. Because the plurality of receiver members of the center bracket member are wider than those associated with the left and right bracket members, they may selectively engage attachment members from each of two adjacent side-by-side shelving members. Multiple center bracket members may be attached adjacently in this manner to provide for gravity feed system that includes multiple columns of shelving positioned in a side-by-side relationship to each other. Here again, the front wall surface of the center bracket member is arguably oriented relative to a vertical plane to impart the gravity feed orientation.
The present system also includes at least one stop member for preventing products positioned on a gravity feed shelving unit or a gravity feed shelving system from sliding off of a particular shelf unit. In the preferred embodiment, the stop member is a telescoping stop member that may extend to any particular length to accommodate the preferences of a particular user and a particular shelving application.
In the accompanying drawings, which form a part of the specification and are to be read in conjunction therewith in which like reference numerals are used to indicate like or similar parts in the various views:
A telescoping stop member 20, which will also be described in greater detail below, may be selectively engageable with apertures 22 associated with the shelving members 10. When stop member 20 is engaged with a shelf member 10, it prevents organizer units or other gravity-feed systems positioned on the shelf members 10 from falling off of shelf member 10 and onto the ground. Gravity feed unit 1 includes a plurality of shelving members 10 arranged substantially in one column as illustrated in
The present invention relates to a plurality of bracket members which convert a known gondola shelving unit to a gravity feed shelving unit 1 as illustrated in
As shown in
In describing the manner in which gravity feed unit 1 is assembled, reference will frequently be made to bracket members 30, 35. Left bracket member 30 is illustrated in various views showing greater detail in
When attachment members 50, 55 of shelving members 10 are placed in substantial alignment with receiver members 60, 65 of bracket members 30, 35, attachment members 50 may be received by apertures 60, and attachment members 55 may be received be apertures 65. Attachment members 50, 55 may also include hook portions 70 extending downwardly therefrom. After the attachment members 50, 55 are received in the corresponding apertures 60, 65, the hook portions 70 will selectively secure the members 50 and 55 within receiver members 60 and 65. Other attachment members associated with other known gondola systems include mechanisms for engaging the receiving members 60 and 65.
Bracket members 30 and 35 also include front wall portions. 75 that will abut a rear portion (not illustrated) of shelving member 10 when receiver members 60, 65 and attachment members 50, 55 are selectively engaged. When the rear portion of a shelving member 10 abuts sloped front wall portion 75 of each bracket member, the angle of sloped portions 75 is transferred to shelving member 10 thereby positioning the shelving member 10 in a gravity feed orientation. In addition, the solid front wall portion 75 below the receiver members 60 and 65 associated with both bracket members 30 and 35 provide additional strength and stability to the now angularly oriented shelf member 10 when the shelf member is engaged with the bracket members 30 and 35.
Protrusions or engaging member 80 extending from the rear portion of each bracket member 30 and 35 are preferably configured so as to be received by the slots 25 of the vertical upright support members 5. In the preferred embodiment, the number of protrusions 80 is equal to the number of receivers 60 and 65, although in alternative embodiments, the number of protrusions 80 may vary depending in part on the strength of the attachment desired with the vertical upright support members 5 as well as the particular application. Bracket members 30, 35 may further include hook members 85 extending downwardly from protrusions 80. When protrusions 80 of bracket members 30, 35 are inserted and received within the slots 25 of vertical upright support members 5, hook members 85 engage an inner wall (not illustrated) of the vertical upright support members 5 so as to selectively engage and hold a particular bracket member at a desired location along the length of the vertical upright support member 5.
When bracket members 30, 35 have been engaged with a pair of vertical upright support members 5 via the slots 25, and when a shelving member 10 has been engaged to the bracket members 30 and 35, that particular shelf member 10 is converted into a gravity feed orientation. The process for converting a shelving member 10 into a gravity feed orientation may be repeated for additional shelf members 10 associated with a particular gondola system as illustrated, for example, in
Referring back to
Receiver members or apertures 100 of center bracket member 45 are wider, preferably two times as wide, than receiver members 60, 65 associated with left and right bracket members 30 and 35. Receiver members 100 are wider than receiver members 60, 65 so that receiver members 100 may receive both the right attachment members 55 associated with left shelving member 90 and the left attachment members 50 associated with right shelving member 95 at the same time as shown in
Center bracket member 45 likewise includes protrusions 80 extending from the rear portion thereof and hook members 85 extending downwardly therefrom as best illustrated in
A limitless number of shelving members 90 and 95 may be placed in side-by-side relationship to each other in the manner described above. Regardless of the number of side-by-side shelving members associated with a particular shelving system, attachment members of adjacent shelving units may be attached to vertical upright support members 5 via center bracket member 45. Left finger or attachment members 50 of the left-most shelving unit 90 and right finger or attachment members 55 of the right-most shelving unit 95 may be attached to vertical upright support members 5 via left bracket member 30 and right bracket member 35 respectively as previously described above.
As shown in
Each stop member 20 may include both an outer rod member 105 and an inner rod member 110. As known in the art, outer rod member 105 preferably has a diameter slightly larger than inner rod member 110 such that inner rod member 110 may be able to telescopically slide within outer rod member 105, and thus extend the length of stop member 20 to accommodate the width of any particular shelf member such as shelf members 10, 90 and/or 95. Other known or foreseeable means for extending stop member 20 are also recognized, anticipated and contemplated herein.
Each stop member 20 also includes a plurality of pegs 115 extending downwardly therefrom. In the embodiment illustrated in
As shown in
It is recognized and anticipated that the present gondola gravity feed conversion bracket system can be utilized with a wide variety of different gondola systems present in the marketplace and that the attachment members or protrusions 80 along with hook members 85 associated with the left, right and center bracket members 30, 35 and 45 can be shaped and configured so as to be insertably receivable within the wide variety of different slots 25 associated with the wide variety of different vertical upright support members 5 associated with different gondola systems. The bracket members 30, 35 and 45 can be tailored and configured to mate with and engage both the vertical upright support members 5 as well as the individual shelf members 10, 90 and 95 associated with each different gondola system. The same is likewise true with respect to the pegs 115 associated with stop member 20, the pegs 115 being shaped and configured so as to be compatible with any particular aperture configuration associated with any particular shelf member 10, 90 and/or 95. Still further, as illustrated in
The constructions described above and illustrated in the drawings are presented by way of example only and are not intended to limit the concepts and principles of the present invention. Thus, there has been shown and described several embodiments of a novel invention. As is evident from the foregoing description, certain aspects of the present invention are not limited by the particular details of the examples illustrated herein, and it is therefore contemplated that other modifications and applications, or equivalents thereof, will occur to those skilled in the art. The terms “having” and “including” and similar terms as used in the foregoing specification are used in the sense of “optional” or “may include” and not as “required”. Many changes, modifications, variations and other uses and applications of the present constructions will, however, become apparent to those skilled in the art after considering the specification and the accompanying drawings. All such changes, modifications, variations and other uses and applications which do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention are deemed to be covered by the invention which is limited only by the claims which follow.