Every aspect of your home office addressed in a single appointment. Ergonomics, connectivity, acoustics, lighting, cable management and monitor configuration — all covered, all documented.
Extended computer work places specific demands on the body. Chair height, seat depth, lumbar support, keyboard and mouse positioning, monitor height and viewing distance — each of these has a measurable effect on comfort and long-term physical health.
Our ergonomic assessment evaluates your current setup against established occupational health guidelines. We make adjustments to existing equipment where possible, and advise on specific additions — monitor arms, footrests, lumbar supports — where the current setup cannot be adequately corrected.
The assessment covers seated posture, reach zones, visual angle and the relationship between your chair, desk and screen. Where a standing desk option is relevant, we factor that in too.
Monitor placement has a significant impact on both physical comfort and productivity. Screens too high or too low force the neck into sustained awkward positions. Screens too close cause eye strain. Multiple screens arranged without considering natural eye movement create unnecessary head turning throughout the day.
We configure monitor height, tilt, distance and rotation according to the user's eye level and working patterns. For dual-screen setups, we establish the correct primary and secondary screen arrangement based on usage frequency. Monitor arms are installed where appropriate to allow precise positioning that fixed stands cannot achieve.
Cable disorder isn't just an aesthetic problem. Tangled, unlabelled cables make troubleshooting harder, create tripping hazards, and accumulate dust in ways that can affect equipment over time. A desk surrounded by cable chaos also has a measurable effect on focus — visual clutter translates to cognitive load.
We route every cable deliberately — power, data and peripheral cables each handled separately. Under-desk cable trays, desk raceways and wall channels are used where appropriate to the room's layout. Every cable is labelled at both ends. The result is a workspace that stays tidy and is straightforward to reconfigure when equipment changes.
A single router placed in the hall is not a network infrastructure — it's a starting point that most Irish homes have never moved beyond. Thick walls, building materials and the distance between the router and the home office combine to create dead zones that no amount of restarting the router will fix.
We map the signal coverage in your home before installation, identify where the dead zones are and where the boundary of usable signal falls. Mesh nodes are then positioned to provide overlapping coverage with no gaps. Where the building structure allows, we use wired backhaul between nodes for maximum reliability. The home office receives a wired connection where possible.
Most home offices have hard surfaces — bare floors, bare walls, glass, bare ceilings. Sound bounces between these surfaces and creates reverberation that makes your voice sound hollow and distant on video calls. Background sounds from elsewhere in the house are picked up and transmitted more readily than they would be in a treated space.
Our acoustic treatment approach is practical and domestic in character — we're not installing a recording studio. We work with soft furnishings, strategically placed panels and door and window sealing to reduce echo and noise bleed to a level that produces clean, clear audio on calls. Treatment is proportional to the room and the problem.
Lighting in a home office serves two distinct purposes that often conflict. Task lighting needs to illuminate your work surface without creating screen glare. Video call lighting needs to illuminate your face from the front without harsh shadows or backlit silhouettes — the "witness protection interview" effect that comes from sitting in front of a window with no front fill.
We assess the natural light in the room, the existing artificial lighting, and the camera position. A combination of ambient, task and key lighting is then configured to serve both functions. Where new lighting is needed, we specify appropriate fixtures and positions. Where existing lighting can be repositioned or adjusted, we do that.
Every engagement includes a return visit at the six-month mark. Workspaces drift — cables get rerouted, monitors get nudged, mesh nodes get moved to charge a phone, ergonomic adjustments get undone. The follow-up visit exists to catch this before it becomes a problem, and to make any adjustments that reflect how your working patterns have evolved.
It's not a courtesy call. It's a proper review of every element we configured on the first visit, with corrections made on the day.
Book Your First VisitContact us to discuss your home office and arrange an assessment visit.