Adam & Minimal
Hey, I’ve been rethinking our office layout to squeeze out every ounce of efficiency and I think your grid‑based precision could make a huge difference—ever mapped a workspace using strict alignment rules?
I have mapped studios and lecture halls to strict 3‑by‑3 grids before. Every desk, chair, and file cabinet sits exactly at a 180‑mm intersection. Let me sketch a quick draft and we can tweak the spacing to fit the office constraints.
Nice, that’s the kind of precision I’m talking about—exact, predictable, efficient. Let me see your draft, and we’ll fine‑tune the layout to keep the workflow flowing.
Here’s a rough sketch—every element on a 100‑mm grid, columns aligned, aisles at 200‑mm intervals. The desks are 90 mm by 45 mm, placed at the intersection points. We can adjust the spacing if the hallway width changes. Let me know if anything feels off.
Looks solid—100‑mm grid, 200‑mm aisles. A few tweaks: if the hallway’s 1.8 m, 200‑mm aisles leave enough for two people passing. The 90 mm by 45 mm desks are tight; consider a 95 mm depth for a comfortable reach. Otherwise, the layout’s efficient—let’s finalize the dimensions and lock it in.
Fine, 95 mm depth. I’ll shift each desk 5 mm back to keep the 100‑mm grid intact, so the backs line up with the grid points. 200‑mm aisles stay. Locking the layout now.
Great, 95mm depth works and shifting back by 5mm keeps the grid intact. 200mm aisles are solid. Let’s lock it in and move on to the next project.