The Cheap Geek
Mar 27 / 11:17pm

Designing and Building a New Desk

I have always been a fan of well designed things. Many very useful and completely competent applications have been deleted from my iPhone simple due to poor UI design. My obsession with Apple products is also a great example of this. The iMacs minimal design of a thin widescreen monitor floating in mid air is wonderful and significantly better than any other desktop currently available. Apples use of thin sleek lines in most of their products got me thinking, “How can I slim down or minimize my home office?”

My main issue was storage. Not physical storage for pins and papers but digital storage. I have three hard drives that contain my media and backups for everything on my network. Up until recently these were local drives connected via USB and FireWire that were stuffed in a semi well ventilated desk drawer. Not only did I have to store the drives themselves but I also had to contend with their power adapters and other connectors. To get on to my point I had a lot of crap zip tied and crammed under my desk that I wasn’t crazy about and I was out of space.

To solve this issue I bought an Airport extreme and put all of my hard drives on my network. This freed up so much space that it allowed me to look for a sleeker desk without drawers that didn’t break the bank. After an extensive search, the desks I found were either too expensive or too ornate.

This lead me down a path of designing and building my own desk while tying to keep it under 150$. I initially drew up a design in Google sketchup, a great free 3D modeling application, and slowly began tweaking it. My initial design requirements consisted of a very thin top somewhere between 1"-2" supported by two sawhorses. I also needed the ability to get power and Ethernet to the machine without seeing any cabling. I settled on the following design.

 

Image

 

Then I had to decide how to build it. I wanted to use solid wood for each component but a solid wood top would encroach on my budget. Instead I bought a solid wood door at a surplus building supply warehouse for 10$. It was in rough shape but for the price I couldn’t pass it up. I made each sawhorse leg out of three pieces of pine glued together.

 

Image

 

Two of the legs have a hollow center so I could run a power cord in one and an Ethernet cable in the other. I made these by splitting the center piece of pine and leaving a gap when glueing them together. After all the legs had dried they needed to be trimmed down to the final dimension of 2" x 2".

 

0image

 

 

I then cut a 15 degree angle at the top and bottom of each leg. I then cut a 75 degree angle in each leg so it could be mounted to the oak runner connecting each pair of legs.

 

1image

 

 

I decided on a single ¾" runner rather than two pieces because I really wanted the sawhorses to be very slim. The legs were attached to the runners with two 2.5" screws that were covered with oak wood plugs and a healthy amount of glue.

 

2image

 

 After both sawhorses were assembled holes were drilled in the two legs where wires would be run and each was sanded to 150 grit.

The table top that began it’s life as a door was first cut down to its final size of 28" x 62" then sanded. I then decided that I wanted to put some additional solid wood edging for added looks and durability. These were attached with glue and a few brad nails and then sanded smooth. The next hurdle was to align the sawhorses with the top of the desk. I decided that I didn’t want to permanently mount the top the the legs so I opted to use dowels to align them. I measured the correct location and drilled half inch corresponding holes in the sawhorses and the top of the desk.

 

3image

 

I then glued two 3" half inch dowels in each sawhorse and let them dry.

 

4image

 

Now I reached the issue of cables. Even though I moved a huge percentage of my cabling into my network closet I had to figure out a way to hide the power and Ethernet cables in the top of the desk. I decided to route a small channel from the top hole in the legs to a hole drilled into the back center of the top. This would allow me to hide the few cables I need.

 

5image

 

Here is the completed desk.

 

6image

 

The last step was finishing the desk. I decided that I wanted to paint it black just like my previous desk. Being that the desk was made out of hardwoods I wanted a little of the texture/grain to be visible. I opted to use a cabot opaque black stain that is more similar to paint than a stain, but it does leave some of the wood texture visible.

 

0image

 

The stain went on in two coats and was then topped with some furniture wax for some added protection. I couldn’t be happier with the way the desk turned out. It achieves my initial goals to build something functional and very minimal. Take a look at the gallery of the completed desk below and the video walkthrough of the office / new desk below.

 

7image

 

8image

 

 

9image

 

10image

36 comments

Mar 29, 2011
negativetwelve said...
I really love the design of this desk! Just curious, what glue did you use for the wood?
Mar 29, 2011
I used titebond original wood glue. I was very happy with the performance of the glue. 



Mar 29, 2011
mikejones09 said...
Love the desk, particularly your ingenious solution to cable management.

I have been looking for a microphone stand like yours; where can I find one?

Mar 29, 2011
Thanks. I bought my mic stand on eBay. It's very high quality and surprisingly sturdy.  



Mar 30, 2011
Thanks, I appreciate it.
Mar 31, 2011
McCArch said...
Just so you know - that's not a mike stand...that's an old Luxor or similar model drafting lamp with the lamp part removed!
Mar 31, 2011
Uhh I bought it as a mic stand, it may resemble a lamp stand though. 


Mar 31, 2011
shannon whit said...
What are the dimensions of this desk? Very nice!! Would you make to order? I've been looking for something like this. I'd really be interested.
Mar 31, 2011
Shannon, send me an email and we can talk about it. Jordan@TheCheapGeek.org



Apr 02, 2011
ChrisRadford said...
Very nice! I am curious about your usage of the Airport Express… You mention it either in the post or video but all I can find is your video on using iTunes — would make for an interesting follow up, how you link you printer and ex-HDDs etc…
Apr 25, 2011
thefavoritist said...
Is there a way that I could get the sketchup file you used to make this desk?
Apr 25, 2011
Yes I was meaning to post the file, Ill add it to the post above.
Apr 25, 2011
Here is the link to the sketch up file
http://db.tt/Q8yMxed
Apr 26, 2011
thefavoritist said...
Thank you very much!
May 08, 2011
Bambi Blue liked this post.
May 09, 2011
Eifion Paul liked this post.
May 09, 2011
Thank you for all of the continued interest in this blog post. For the few that commented about wanting a desk like this I am currently building another one for a client.
May 09, 2011
jchall said...
Great Mic stand using lamp from IKEA, follow this link to Lifehacker:
http://lifehacker.com/5790102/make-an-adjustable-diy-mic-stand-out-of-an-ikea...
May 19, 2011
rh224 said...
Love the desk. You've inspired me and I've decided to build my own. Mine probably won't end up as clean and utilitarian as yours as I have a tower, not an iMac, so I decided to use 1' x 4's for the rear legs. This gives enough room to pass a DVI cable up the leg. Since I work with video, my external drives can't be networked, so I left a gap in the inside center of the hollow legs about 1/3 of the way up so I can add a shelf for Hard Drives and other accessories. I've got all my legs made and will assemble the sawhorses tomorrow. Great project!
May 19, 2011
That is awesome, I am considering playing around with long USB/Firewire cables for local hard drives with the wires running in the legs. I would you to see pictures of your desk when you complete it.
May 22, 2011
soule said...
Looks great! I have a few questions though:
How strong are the sawhorses?
What was the most expensive part of the desk?
Lastly, where did you buy the parts?

Thanks a lot!

May 22, 2011
The sawhorse is very strong, I stood on the desk with no issues. The wood to do the top is the most expensive. 



Aug 25, 2011
rkdtoo said...
Hmm... I don't get something - if the holes for cables are drilled in the bottom of the legs - do the legs then stand on the cables? Can't be; or the cables run straight out of the floor into the legs?
Aug 25, 2011
rkdtoo said...
What tool was used to make the channel?
Sep 21, 2011
AlbortAzmi said...
Hi, I think you are right.
Design Desk
Oct 17, 2011
James said...
How much did the total build cost?
Oct 17, 2011
All in all I spent about 175$.
Oct 20, 2011
Richard LaBonte said...
how many hours did you have in to making this decks ,Its nice
Oct 20, 2011
Oh, it took me somewhere around 15 hours.
Feb 28, 2012
Brock said...
This desk is awesome! I kind of want to attempt this project but am a little scared...
Feb 28, 2012
chaisedebureau said...
Hi,

This is jonesdrumanThis blog was simply great post byb you. I really appreciate your blog. Really awesome blog I would like to know more about this. Please give some ideas about your blog. Thanks………

mobilier de bureau

Mar 01, 2012
Hi, simply great post.

móveis para escritório

Mar 11, 2012
veronica said...
how if i want to make bad,sofa and other furniture make a skutchup ?
Mar 25, 2012
Brad said...
Great finish on the desk. We are just building our own home/office desk set up and think the finish you used looks awesome, think we will go with something similar.
Apr 04, 2012
veronica said...
ok, i was try it, you you know, i can make sofa and badroom,and chair and others :) thx you :)
Apr 04, 2012
Gold Coast Brad said...
This is perfect as we are about to embark on an office rebuild as well.

Leave a comment...