Hi Geoff
I've just setup new premises in a self-converted 30ft x 10ft shipping
container in the Olympic Park, London, UK.
I visited Condor Cycles, Cloud 9 Cycles, Soho Cycles and a few others
that are deemed the best of the best in London to ask if I could photo
their workshops and get advice.
All were very helpful and because my business runs on a gift economy and
open source, all were happy for me to photo their workshops and talk me
through what worked and why.
What I found:
- vertical storage (if safe and you have height) good
- keeping only what is needed most to hand, the rest further away
(minimal movement wasted)
- dedicated bench/toolboard for facing/setting tools with a grinding
wheel (if possible) and heavy bench vice
- lots of space needed to store completed bikes/bikes awaiting
service? Make a scaffolding rail & use meathooks - slide the bikes
like clothes on a clothing rail!
- double-sided stands are brilliant for frame swapouts and saving
space (if you have the width)
- paint benches and tool/shadowboards black - easy to find tools,
looks good, stays looking good even when dirty
- PVC piping with angle bend is a great way of storing cable inners!
What I also did
- long shipping containers are dark - I installed a 2.5kW solar system
on the roof for internal LED spots and striplights - make sure
benches are well lit and lit in a way as to avoid glare
- I didn't have budget for proper storage and benches so bought cheap
2nd hand stackable plastic storage bin boxes and built benches from
plywood to exactly fit these (with 1/2" gap around each)
- Benches with tops deeper than the bench width means you can get your
feet right up to the bench
- Used a few interior design tricks to make the space appear bigger -
racks/storage mounted off the floor - white wherever possible
(especially ceiling)....would have uplighters too if more power (our
projects runs off-grid)
Other thoughts
- sliding doors? use this space for your safety posters and legal
stuff (we need HSE posters, fire safety and company documentation
displayed in UK) - or more storage if sliding mechanism can cope
- ensure there is adequate space to move around - a good rule of thumb
is 60cm-70cm gap
- have a mix of new and parts used by volunteers/staff? colour code
storage bins/boxes - one for old, one for new
- easy clean/non-slip flooring is a worthy investment
- parts washer great if you have chance to get one
Warmest regards,
*Lawrence Mohammed*
Director/Head Mechanic
*+44 (0)77 222 58587*
*probikeservice.co.uk https://probikeservice.co.uk*
*facebook.com/probikeservice
https://www.facebook.com/professionalbikeservice*
/[Location, NOT delivery address]
Pro Bike Service C.I.C.
Mobile Garden City
Olympic Village
London E20 1GW/
On 25/07/17 21:11, thethinktank-request@lists.bikecollectives.org wrote:
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