Then I'll make a start. When you migrate across Europe and live in appartments, setting up and maintining a workshop is not so easy. This must be now the fourth incarnation of the workshop. A basically separated one corner of 2 m by 2 m from my study/home office. The furniture in that room are basically utilitarian IKEA bookcases all around the room that house my extensive library. The workshop utilises partly IKEA bookcases and partly consists of built-to-measure items using the same style of wood and construction. One day I will have a nice custom-made library and workshop

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I protect the floor with some laminate floor boards that are laid on the existing parquet (or fitted carpet in a previous rented appartement). The bookcases, work table and machine tables are arranged around this. The whole has a bit of a medieval appearance as more shelving and storage cabinets were added over time as the need arose. I tried to keep the same style of wood though. Everything is designed to be mobile, i.e. to be taken to pieces in case of a house move.

Panorama
On the back of the low book case in the foreground is the machine table for the lathe (see below). On the left is a chest of drawers with shallow trays for materials and shelves for paints and chemicals, behind the machine table for the mills, above there are storage racks for long materials. The work table (a beech kitchen-top offcut) is supported on one side by a bookcase that provides storage shelves and on the right by a chest of deep, but narrow drawers. It is surrounded by hardboard panels on which tools can be hanged using special hooks (unfortunately, IKEA discontinued both the board and the hooks).

The work table (with the common clutter

)
The machine tables were made to measure with beech tops. They either suspend the storage boxes for the watchmakers lathes and their accessories. The lathe stand also has a storage cabinet with pull-out shelves for the lathe accessories.

The lathe stand (at the previous incarnation of the workshop)

The mill stand (at the previous incarnation of the workshop)
I also have a classical drawing table cum drawing machine, but since I had a desktop computer, it replaced the drawing machine.
Storing flat large folded or unfolded plans is always a problem and I wish I had the space for a drawings cabinet. They are currently stored in large, shallwo boxes in a wardrobe. Some unwieldy stock materials are also stored 'off-site' so to say in wardrobes or in the basement.
Lucky those, who have their house and can make the workshop a more permanent fixture ...
wefalck