|
Monitors Mastered |
|
WallGoldfinger has established itself as the industry leader in custom monitor lift systems for conference tables and associated case pieces. Since doing our first monitor lift table some six years ago (see bottom right), we’ve done dozens of custom projects, all with slightly different client requirements. At the same time, we've standardized components and streamlined the engineering process so that these sophisticated tables are available at ever lower prices and with ever shorter schedules. The table above (shown in an early conceptual rendering*), designed by Mancini Duffy for a major financial services firm, features an Argos marble center panel surrounded by zebrawood veneer. The monitors deploy and retract via articulated swing arms designed by WallGoldfinger. * Please contact us to see what our rendering services can do for your project! |
|
|
In this table, built for a noted biopharmaceutical company, the monitors are deployed vertically, using electric lifts. African mahogany veneer and statuary bronze are the featured materials and the shallow riser also contains power/data hatches and microphone mounts. |
|
|
The photo on the left (above) — a 29 monitor table for a major Boston bank — gives some idea of tight spaces and complex geometry WallGoldfinger's engineers have to deal with. This shot shows the table in our factory fit-out phase, before a mass of wiring for the electronics obscured much of what you see here. This 11 monitor table (above right) serves as boardroom table as well as a video conferencing table. Executed in cherry for a growing regional bank, it serves a vital communications link for a rapidly growing enterprise. |
|
|
Here (above left) we see the actual, as-built table shown in our introductory rendering. Client requirements changed so the number of monitors was reduced to 12 from 16. WallGoldfinger's first monitor lift table (above right) was a very complex affair, with 21 individually controllable monitors, retractable power & data and an elegant mix of materials in a challenging geometric form. Built for one of America’s largest consumer product companies in 2003, this table was the first step in establishing WallGoldfinger's pre-eminent position in the world of hyper-advanced technology integration. |
