This invention relates generally to folding and stepping furniture and, more particularly, a step stool that is mountable within a bathroom or kitchen cabinet and that is pivotal between a stored configuration entirely within the cabinet interior area and a deployed configuration partially inside the cabinet and partially extending forwardly of the cabinet.
Parents of young children are very familiar with brushing their children's teeth in the morning or before bed—an exercise that often times includes lifting the child up to the height of the sink or even sitting the child atop the sink cabinet. Positioning the child near the sink enables the child to spit out a mouthful of toothpaste or rinsing water. Eventually, the child becomes experienced enough to successfully brush his own teeth entirely. Unfortunately, the child may not be able to fully reach the sink or water faucet controls without a parent's assistance—leading to the child trying to find creative ways to elevate to the height of the sink. This may include inconvenience and difficult of retrieving a step stool from a utility closet and returning it to the closet following use.
Various step stool devices have been proposed in the art for assisting a child with stepping up to a sink. Although presumably effective for their intended purposes, the existing devices and patent proposals do not provide a step stool mounted within a cabinet and configured to be pivotally movable between a stored configuration completely contained within the cabinet and a deployed configuration partially extending forwardly of the cabinet.
Therefore, it would be desirable to have an in-cabinet step stool that fulfills the disadvantages and limitations of the prior art and the objective disclosed below.
An in-cabinet step stool according to the present invention for use with a cabinet having a bottom wall displaced upwardly from a floor surface and having a front side defining an opening giving access to the cabinet interior area, the in-cabinet step stool including a framework having a pair of upstanding side walls laterally spaced apart from one another, each side wall having a rear section and a front section extending forwardly and downwardly from the rear section. An upper step spans between upper edges of respective rear sections. A lower step spans between upper edges of respective lower sections. Each includes a rear foot having a rounded configuration such that the framework is pivotally movable thereon between a (1) deployed configuration in which the rear foot rests upon the bottom wall of the cabinet and the front section extends forwardly through the opening of the cabinet and a stored configuration in which the rear foot rests upon the bottom wall of the cabinet and the front section is inside the cabinet interior area.
Therefore, a general object of this invention is to provide an in-cabinet step stool that enables a young child to selectively deploy the step stool for use and then pivot the step stool to a storage configuration inside a sink cabinet.
Another object of this invention is to provide an in-cabinet step stool, as aforesaid, that includes a rear section mounted within the interior area of a cabinet and a front section that selectively extends forwardly of the cabinet.
Still another object of this invention is to provide an in-cabinet step stool, as aforesaid, having a configuration that, while positioned partially inside the cabinet and partly outside the cabinet, has level and parallel steps by which to step up to a cabinet sink.
Yet another object of this invention is to provide an in-cabinet step stool, as aforesaid, in which a rear section of the framework has a rounded configuration upon which the framework is pivotally movable without any other hardware.
A further object of this invention is to provide an in-cabinet step stool, as aforesaid, that is easily movable between storage and deployed configuration by a child.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein is set forth by way of illustration and example, embodiments of this invention.
An in-cabinet step stool according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention will now be described in detail with reference to
The in-cabinet step stool 10 is for preferred use with a cabinet 12 of a type common to residential bathrooms (
The framework 20 includes a pair of upstanding side walls 22 laterally spaced apart from and situated parallel to one another. Each side wall 22 has a thin profile and is preferably constructed of a wood material although an aluminum or other metal construction would also be suitable. When installed in a cabinet, the side walls 22 are preferably parallel to corresponding side walls of the cabinet itself. Each side wall 22 includes a rear section 30 and a front section 40 extending forwardly and downwardly from the rear section 30. In an embodiment, the rear section 30 and front section 40 of each side wall 22 has a unitary or singular construction, such as being cut from a single piece of wood.
An upper step 34 spans between upper edges 32 of respective rear sections 30 of each side wall 22. Similarly, a lower step 44 spans between upper edges of respective front sections 40 of each side wall 22. The upper step 34 is “stepwise” displaced upwardly and rearwardly from the lower step 44 so that a person, such as a toddler or young child, can step first on the lower step 44 and then the upper step 34 when the framework 20 is deployed in order to have access to a sink atop the cabinet 12.
Each rear section 30 includes a rear foot 36 having a rounded configuration in the likeness of a wheel such that the framework 20 may be pivotally movable thereon between a deployed configuration extending forwardly through the cabinet opening and a stored configuration in which the framework 20 is completely received inside the interior area of the cabinet 12. More particularly, at the deployed configuration the rear foot 36 rests upon the bottom wall 14 of the cabinet 12 while the front section 40 extends forwardly through the cabinet opening (
The lower step 44 and upper step 34 have generally planar configurations and are parallel relative to one another. Both steps are also parallel to the bottom wall of the cabinet 12 and to the floor surface 18 when the framework is at the deployed configuration as described below. The front section 40 of each side wall 22 includes a front foot 46 configured to bear against a floor surface 18 beneath the cabinet 12 when the framework 20 is moved to the deployed configuration (
The framework 20 includes a rear support member 38 extending between and coupling together respective rear sections 30 of the pair of side walls 22. More particularly, the rear support member 38 may extend between inner surfaces of respective rear feet 36 (
The in-cabinet step stool 10 may include a base member 50 for mounting the framework 20 inside the cabinet 12. The base member 50 is configured so that the side walls 22 of the framework 20 are movable between the deployed configuration and the stored configuration while maintaining a fixed position atop the bottom wall 14 of the cabinet 12. In other words, the base member 50 prevents the framework 20 from traveling across the bottom wall 14.
More particularly, the base member 50 includes an attachment section 52 selectively mounted to the bottom wall 14 of the cabinet 12 and a guide section 54 operatively coupled to the framework 20. The attachment section 52 may be generally flat/planar plate extending substantially between the rear feet 36 the rear section 30. The attachment section 52 may be mounted to the bottom wall 14 with screws or similar fasteners (
In use, the attachment section 52 of the base member 50 may be mounted to the bottom wall 14 of a cabinet and the framework 20 pivoted to the stored configuration—hidden from view within the interior area of the cabinet 12 (
It is understood that while certain forms of this invention have been illustrated and described, it is not limited thereto except insofar as such limitations are included in the following claims and allowable functional equivalents thereof.
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