Not Applicable.
Not Applicable.
Not Applicable.
The invention relates to post and beam furniture construction and more particularly to accessory positioning relative to post spacing and to accessory length and beam installation and removal without post movement.
Many modular work environment partition systems available in the marketplace offer many clever options for workplace landscape design, productivity enhancement, and the like. In using workplace panel systems, however, basic geometric or physical phenomena must be accommodated. One such occurrence has been referred to as “creep” and is basically a result of non-linear panel intersection such as making corners with panels. Intersecting panels at corners is common when a large room is partitioned into desired work areas or stations and is required by structural considerations.
Panels are three dimensional elements, having height, width, and thickness. As panels are joined edge to edge, a straight wall may be formed. The length of the formed wall is a result of the width of the panels times the number of panels used. Work enhancing accessories, including such items as various work surfaces, storage accessories, and lighting accessories, for example, are typically hung upon and supported by the partition system panels. A work surface accessory may further be any of a variety of surfaces, including bench, table, or desk surfaces. A storage accessory may include any of a number of storage accessories, including a shelf or a cabinet or the like. These accessories are typically provided in modular widths that correspond to the modular width of the partition wall panels.
When the distance of a panel thickness is added into or effectively removed from the length of a partition wall, however, shorter and longer width accessories are required to avoid arrangement conflicts. With reference to a schematic sketch of a prior art modular wall of
A common solution to these creeping partition wall issues is to provide accessories with differing widths, so a proper width accessory is available to accommodate various wall creep situations. This may increase the number of accessory items by as much as thirteen times, however, to provide accessories that are the same width as the panels, that are a panel thickness longer on the left end, that are a panel thickness longer on the right end, that are a panel thickness shorter on the left end, that are a panel thickness shorter on the right end, that are half a panel thickness longer on the left end, that are half a panel thickness longer on the right end, that are half a panel thickness shorter on the left end, that are half a panel thickness shorter on the right end, that are a panel thickness longer on both ends, that are a panel thickness shorter on both ends, that are half a panel thickness longer on both ends, and that are half a panel thickness shorter on both ends. This is clearly an onerous demand upon inventory and production.
Thus, one understands a desire for a workplace partitioning system that addresses the issue of creep, which is inherent in modular partition systems, and that addresses the associated inventory and production implications.
Accordingly, a post and beam furniture construction of the invention provides an adjustable modular approach to workplace environment partition systems. The invention includes a number of support posts, a plurality of length adjustable beams, and various accessories that are adaptable regarding their relative position along a width of a panel.
In one aspect of the invention, an accessory support bracket connects with a post at a selected one of alternative accessory receptacles that are spaced along a width of a partition wall portion, thereby affecting the widthwise positioning of the bracket relative to the post. Further, an accessory may have a number of support bracket receptacles along a length of the accessory and the support bracket connects with a selected one of the bracket receptacles, thereby affecting the widthwise positioning of the accessory relative to the bracket.
In another aspect of the invention, a beam is connected between two adjacent support posts. The beam has an adjustable length. Further, a selected beam length defines a spacing between the adjacent posts. Further yet, the beam is adjustable in lengths that are a variety of incremental distances according to the spacing of both cooperating bracket receptacles that are disposed along the accessories and the spacing of accessory receptacles on supporting posts.
One more aspect of the invention is a beam that is connectable between and removable from between a pair of posts without repositioning the posts. A further aspect of the invention is that at least one of a panel or a screen is supported by at least one beam. Yet a further aspect of the invention is that a mount extends along a support post and an accessory or a beam connects with the post through the mount. The mount may further include a series of rungs disposed along the post length. A beam may have a jaw or cooperating upper and lower jaws that capture a rung, connecting the beam with the post.
These and other features or benefits of the invention will be recognized from this specification, including the claims and the drawing figures, by one having ordinary skill in the art and by those who practice the invention.
With general reference to the drawing, a preferred embodiment of a post and beam furniture construction according to the invention is shown. More specifically, a free-standing L-shaped work station configuration 100 of the invention is shown in
In a simple concept, a post and beam furniture construction includes at least two posts 110 and a beam extending between the posts. The posts 110 are elongated structural members that extend generally upward from a floor end 112 to an opposite terminal end 114. Each post has a length from the floor end to the terminal end. The beam may preferably be an elongated structural member that extends from one post to another post, as discussed below, or alternatively may include a work enhancing accessory, which may as noted above, include such items as various work surfaces, storage accessories, and lighting accessories, for example. The invention further includes at least one mount 120 on each post and an accessory supported by the posts. Each mount extends at least partially along the length of its respective post and is a device by which a post is connected with other components of the construction system.
The posts in
One having ordinary skill in the art and those who practice the invention will appreciate that various other scales, or dimensions, for the components of the invention may be appropriate for other specific uses of the invention, even in industrial and laboratory environments. Specific dimensioning of the components of the invention for various applications is merely a matter of a desired strength or of strength analysis. Thus, one having ordinary skill in the art understands that further recitation of component dimensions or omission of such dimensions does not affect the one's ability to successfully make and use the invention.
Each mount has two opposing edges 122 (
A plurality of openings 128 are also disposed along the post length and between the rails and open into the interior cavity that extends the length of the post. Each opening defines a rung portion 130 between the rails. The openings are also adapted to receive an end of a beam 134, as will be discussed further below.
With reference to
It is further noted that while the posts 140A and 140B incorporate the same first and second mounts as do the posts 110A and 110B, the posts 140A and 140B do not incorporate the same third and fourth mounts. Rather, the first and second mounts of posts 140A and 140B are supplemented with an accessory rail 124 that extends along a length of an adjacent, orthogonal surface 142 of the respective post. The supplementing accessory rails 124 expand the versatility of the mounts 120 for supporting accessories. This supplementing accessory rail arrangement is noted in the posts of
An accessory is typically connected between and supported by mounts 120 of adjacent posts. An accessory may be one of a group of accessories, including such exemplary items as various work surfaces, storage accessories, and lighting accessories, for example. A work surface accessory may further be any of a variety of work surface accessories, including without limitation, bench, table, and desk surfaces. Further, a storage accessory may include any of a number of storage accessories, including a shelf, a cabinet, or the like, for example. With reference to
A shelf 146 is connected with and supported by either posts 110A and 110B (
Each support bracket as shown has a generally triangular design with a mounting edge 160 that will typically be generally vertically oriented and abut a mount 120 and with a support edge 162 that is generally perpendicular to the mounting edge and that will typically be generally horizontally oriented and support an accessory there upon. A series of cooperating headed posts extend from the mounting edge. The headed posts extend into the circular portions of the accessory rail 124 key-hole slots 126 and slide downward into the key-hole leg or channel, where the head of the headed post holds against the key-hole leg and the bracket is releasably connected with the post by the mount, providing a releasable connection that is understood by one having ordinary skill in the art.
The support edge 162 of the support bracket 150 has a tab 164 extending both generally upward and at least partially along the support edge. The bracket receptacles 158 of the shelf 146, or other accessory, are shown as a series of aligned cooperating slots as noted above. The bracket tab 164 is received in slip fit engagement into a preselected slot of the series of bracket receptacles 158. As shown in the drawing (
In one alternative of the shelf and bracket interconnection, the tab may be a pair of tabs with a tab at the front and a tab at the back of the shelf, as indicated by phantom line 166 (
As may now be understood from the disclosure of the shelf and post interconnection of the invention, an accessory may be positioned substantially as desired relative to supporting posts by a selection of available accessory receptacles 126 of one or the other rails 124 of the mount 120, and by a selection of available bracket receptacles 158 disposed along the length of the accessory. The drawing shows by example, that a shelf or other accessory end may be positioned generally flush with a post side (
In consideration of this versatility of the placement of the storage accessory shelf 146, a mirror image support bracket 156 may be provided as seen in
The feature of locating an accessory at various positions relative to a supporting post is particularly beneficial when the posts of the post and beam construction are not uniformly spaced, which may typically occur with a terminal or end post of a line of posts or with a hub post in a “T” 170 (
While accessories that are connected with mounts 120 of adjacent posts may serve as beams, which position, space, and interconnect adjacent posts as suggested above, separate beam members 174, 176 are more preferably used so the accessories may be freely arranged or rearranged without consideration of affecting foundational structure, namely, the posts and the beams which can be co-located on the same sides of the posts as the accessories without interfering with the accessories (
The beams 174, 176 typically extend substantially horizontally between adjacent posts, with the first beam end 182 capturing a selected rung of a first mount and the second beam end 184 capturing a corresponding selected rung of a second mount that aligns with the rung of the first mount and positions the beam horizontally (
As is generally shown in the drawing, a beam 174 of a post and beam furniture construction of the invention may have a fixed length (
With reference to
In the preferred embodiment, the movable jaw 196 is connected with the jaw body 190 by a connection screw 210. Thus, the movable jaw is provided with a cooperating internally threaded hole 212 to engage the connection screw and the jaw body has a larger hole 214 for the connection screw to slip into and be seated in. Rotational actuation of the connection screw translates the movable jaw between the open and closed positions. The selection of the movable jaw having the threaded hole and the jaw body having the slip fit hole anticipates this as an arrangement of typical use, although circumstances of a specific use or installation of the invention may indicate that an opposite arrangement may be desired as one having ordinary skill in the art will understand.
Again, the jaw body 190 and generally the beam assembly are generally shown defined by an open sided channel with the open side facing downward; the upper jaw is fixed with a downward extending tooth; and the lower jaw is movable with an upward extending tooth. This is a preferred and typical arrangement or orientation, so the jaw portion of a beam may be set on selected rungs with the fixed jaw supporting the beam. With the beam resting on selected rungs, the movable jaw may be drawn up into the cooperating, clamping, closed position relative to the upper or fixed jaw by rotation of the connecting screw.
One having ordinary skill in the art will note that the movable jaw 196 capturing a rung 130 in the closed position (
While the above jaw portion orientation is a preferred and a typical orientation, an “inverted” orientation is also anticipated. More specifically with reference to
Again, in one aspect of the invention as noted above, the jaw portion of the beam may be configured as a separable member or beam coupler 222 that has an elongated jaw body 190 with the jaw portion 224 at one end and an opposite tail end 226 (
Having at least one end of a beam terminate with a separable beam coupler 222 of the invention provides several advantages in construction flexibility. Of course, providing a separable beam coupler at each beam end even further enhances construction flexibility. One such advantage is an ability to reposition or otherwise replace a beam without moving the respective posts, by merely disengaging a coupler from the beam body.
Another advantage with each beam end having a separable beam coupler, is an ability to use commonly available tubular or channel structural members to construct beams. While one may inventory a number of beam couplers 222 and may also inventory various beam bodies 220, and further use them in a given post and beam construction, the beam bodies are substantially fungible items that are easily modified or replaced in the field. The use of a separable coupler at each beam end frees the user to greater flexibility and creativity in a post and beam construction with the invention without burdening the manufacturer or other vendor with onerous inventory or a plethora of beam component items.
An example of installation flexibility in the field is the availability with the invention to choose a particular beam body, say a closed tube as opposed to an open channel for strength or perhaps for cable or other conduit shielding considerations adjacent to the opening in the posts, providing further access to and between the interior cavities of the posts. With regard to an inverted beam orientation, discussed above, use of separable beam couplers at each beam end provides an option that the couplers may be positioned and fastened to their respective posts in a non-inverted orientation with only the beam body then being inverted and connected with the couplers, discussed further above.
To emphasize, a beam is an extensible length member when separable beam couplers 222 are used. This relates to the issue of panel creep and the variable position accessories discussed above in which an accessory may be located at various positions along its length relative to supporting posts. Telescoping or extensible length beams and variable position accessories may individually or in combination advantageously absorb or displace panel or post creep.
In another aspect of the invention, a fixed length beam member may be installable between or removable from between a pair of supporting posts without repositioning the posts. This may be accomplished with a properly configured beam end by inserting the beam end into its respective post beyond an installed position, which positions the beam opposite end clear of its respective post. Thus, the beam opposite end is positioned clear from its respective post, which results in the beam being removable from or installable between its supporting posts without repositioning the posts.
A beam end configuration that accommodates this installation and removal is the jaw portion 224 including a cutaway portion 236 extending along the beam length or beam coupler length from the upper jaw 192 of one beam end toward the other beam end, so the beam end may slide past a rung 130, into the mount opening 128, and into the post. It is also noted that if the movable jaw were fixed longitudinally, then this situation may typically preclude extending the end of the beam into its respective post to free the opposite end of the beam for removal of the beam from or insertion of the beam between its support posts without moving the posts.
Thus, the lower jaw 196, or the movable jaw, is further preferably connected by way of a toggle connection, as shown (
Finally, a post may be provided with a foot at the floor end 112 (
One having ordinary skill in the art and those who practice the invention will understand that various modifications and improvements may be made without departing from the disclosed inventive concept. Various relational terms, including left, right, front, back, top, and bottom, for example, are used in the detailed description of the invention and in the claims only to convey relative positioning of various elements of the claimed invention and are not otherwise used to limit the scope of the invention.
This application is a continuation-in-part of Applicant's co-pending application Ser. No. 11/620,420, entitled Post and Beam Furniture Construction, filed Jan. 5, 2007, which in turn is a non-provisional application based on Applicant's now expired provisional Application No. 60/756,725 of the same title, filed Jan. 6, 2006, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110155679 A1 | Jun 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60756725 | Jan 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11620420 | Jan 2007 | US |
Child | 12978000 | US |