Office Workstation Layout Guide
Quick answer: A practical office workstation layout starts with headcount, team grouping, desk size, panel privacy, storage needs, cable access, walkway clearance, and future expansion. UA Office supplies modular desking and workstation systems for Malaysian offices.
Start With Headcount And Team Grouping
Before choosing desks, confirm how many people need seats now and how many may be added later. Group users by department, collaboration pattern, privacy needs, and supervision requirements. This helps decide whether to use straight rows, back-to-back workstations, team clusters, manager desks, or mixed layouts.
Choose Desk Sizes Around Real Work
Desk size should match the work done at each seat. Administrative users, designers, managers, sales teams, and support teams may need different desktop space, monitor arms, pedestal storage, or document access. A workstation layout should also leave practical clearance for chairs, walkways, cabinets, and maintenance access.
Plan Power, Data, And Cable Access
Power and data routes are a common reason workstation layouts become difficult to install. Decide early whether power comes from floors, walls, columns, or ceiling drops. Panel systems and modular desks can help keep cable routes more organised when planned before installation.
Decide Whether Panels Are Needed
Panels can provide privacy, reduce visual distraction, support cable routing, and separate teams without building permanent rooms. If privacy is important, compare panel height, finish, workstation spacing, and whether departments may need to reconfigure later. For more detail, see the office panel partition guide.
Common Workstation Layout Types
- Back-to-back workstations: useful for open-plan teams and efficient seat counts.
- Cluster workstations: useful for departments that collaborate often.
- Linear desk rows: useful for training, operations, and dense layouts.
- Manager workstations: useful when storage, privacy, or visitor seating is needed.
- Mixed layouts: useful for offices with open work areas, executive rooms, meeting rooms, and support spaces.
To compare workstation options, see UA Desking Concept or contact UA Office with your floor plan.