Showing posts with label ergonomics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ergonomics. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 06, 2012

Standing Desks

Donald Rumsfeld at a standing desk while U.S. Secretary of DefenseSomeone asked me about what height a work surface used while standard should be. The obvious first place to look is "The Measure of Man and Woman: Human Factors in Design" by Alvin R . Tilley of Henry Dreyfuss Associates (Wiley, 2001 avialable in the University of Canberra Library). This gives recommended dimensions for all sort of work surfaces (originally for the US military but later updated). But I could not find a recommended height for a standing desk there, or an where else.

With some searching on-line I found the term for a desk used when standing is a "stand-up" or standing desk. Amazon.com sell "standing desks".

There is the wonderfully titled article "Become a Stand-Up Guy: The History, Benefits, and Use of Standing Desks" by Brett & Kate McKay on July 5, 2011. The company Standup Desks. offers Measuring Tips.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Measure of Man and Woman

The Measure of Man and Woman: Human Factors in Design By Alvin R. Tilley, Henry Dreyfuss AssociatesWandering the shelves of the new University of Sydney SciTech Library, I cam across the 1960 edition of designer Henry Dreyfuss' "The Measure of Man". This is a set of charts showing measurements of men, women and children, with how far they can reach and see when standing and sitting. It also gives recommended sizes for desks, consoles and the like.

The updated, politically correct edition is called "The Measure of Man and Woman: Human Factors in Design" by Alvin R . Tilley of Henry Dreyfuss Associates (Wiley, 2001). The original work was developed from measurements taken of people in the US military and had separate sets of charts for men and women (from a time when men and women would be unlikely to be doing the same jobs). The new work combines men and women on the same charts. The full text and images are available via the Amazon online reader.

With the charts you can see what the recommended size for stand up and sit down computer consoles suitable for 99 percent of the male and female adult population, how high a console can be and still be able to see over it, what width to make the console. There are also measurements for children using equipment. This information is of increasing value for libraries, schools and offices as computer based working and learning become more common.

Some of the original information is a little esoteric for the average office, such as how the angle of vision narrows in low light conditions. This might be of value for designing a display used in low light conditions in a museum. The more general information is of value: for example will students be able to comfortably see the whiteboard at the front of the room while seated at a computer in the flexible learning center?

Some problems with the original measurements have been corrected: conversions to mm as well as inches are now provided. But the recommended sizes for desks have been rounded to a convenient number of inches and then just converted to mm. In practice the measures should be rounded for mm. As an example 15 inches is 381 mm, but it would be better rounded to 380 mm. Also the measurements of people used are mostly based on US military. They therefore will be less representative of the average person in the USA and even less typical of the rest of the world.

Sizing computer desks for people

See also some books and DVDs on Industrial design: