BC-BT244636
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Meetings rarely fail because teams don’t have ideas—they fail because the space slows them down. Someone’s laptop is dying, a cable is stretched across the walking path, and the tabletop turns into a crowded patchwork of adapters. This conference table was created to remove those small frictions that quietly steal attention. The first impression is visual: long, modern lines that make the room feel organized before anyone even sits down. The second impression is tactile: a large, steady surface that feels dependable under notebooks, devices, and shared materials. When the conversation gets intense, the space still feels calm—because the table helps keep the center of the room clean.
The integrated junction box with a double-sided socket function is placed to support real meeting behavior—people sit on both sides, plug in, and keep the tabletop usable. Cable management design helps route power more neatly so cords don’t spill into foot traffic or snag chair legs. And on the side panels, sound-controlled light strips add a modern, responsive detail: a soft visual signal that makes the room feel up-to-date, especially in boardrooms and executive spaces where details influence confidence. The result is not just a place to sit—it’s a workspace that stays ready for the next agenda item.
| Item | Specification |
|---|---|
| Product Name | Conference Table |
| Color | Picture color |
| Type | meeting table |
| Model Number | BC-BT244636 |
| General Use | Office furniture or School furniture |
| Design | Morden Office Furniture |
| Size | 3600*1200*760 or 4200*1500*760 |
| Application | Hotel, Apartment, School, Library, Meeting Room, Reception Room, Other |
| Payment terms | T/T |
| Service | OEM/ODM |
| Transaction mode | FOB, EXW, CIF, DDP |
| Lead time (days) | 30–45 days |
What it solves: In busy meeting rooms, surfaces face constant contact—bags, laptops, coffee cups, quick cleanups. Grade E1 board supports a more controlled material standard for indoor commercial environments.
How it feels in use: A stable tabletop that doesn’t feel flimsy during typing, note-taking, or when multiple people lean in to review documents.
What it solves: Power access should not become a negotiation. Double-sided socket access supports participants on both sides, reducing cable crossing and seat-to-seat disruption.
Meeting outcome benefit: Teams stay present in the discussion because charging and powering devices becomes routine, not a mid-meeting task.
What it solves: Loose cords create visual mess and trip risks. Cable management supports tidier routing so the room stays professional for guests and executives.
Operational benefit: Faster room resets between meetings because cables remain more controlled and predictable.
What it solves: Modern meeting rooms need subtle cues that look premium without extra devices or decor clutter.
Experience benefit: The light strip detail adds a contemporary presence—especially effective in executive boardrooms and hotel meeting rooms where atmosphere matters.
What it solves: In project furniture, durability is often decided by hardware and finishing consistency, not just the tabletop size.
Long-term benefit: A more stable ownership experience—less rattling, fewer small maintenance annoyances, and a finish that supports daily professional use.
Conference rooms should make people feel prepared. This table is built to reduce the small interruptions that break momentum: searching for outlets, dragging power strips across the floor, or stacking adapters on the tabletop. With integrated power access and cable management, the meeting space stays visually calm—so the focus remains on decisions, not devices. The double-sided socket junction box supports plug-in access across both sides of the table, which helps avoid cables stretching across seats. And because the table is offered in large, boardroom-ready sizes, teams don’t feel cramped when documents, laptops, and shared materials appear. When the environment feels orderly, participants tend to speak more clearly, listen longer, and leave with fewer loose ends—because the space itself stops fighting the agenda.
Less friction: quicker start time, fewer mid-meeting interruptions.
Cleaner centerline: the tabletop stays usable for documents and collaboration.
More professional impression: visitors notice order and intention immediately.
Choosing the right conference table is part design, part logistics. This model supports two project-friendly sizes that fit common boardroom and training room layouts. The goal is to keep sightlines open, maintain comfortable elbow room, and preserve walkways so participants can enter, sit, and present without bumping chairs or stepping over cables. Because chairs and room dimensions vary by project, seating capacity can differ—but the table sizes provide a strong baseline for planning, procurement, and layout approvals. Use the table below as a practical starting point during room planning and proposals.
| Table Size (mm) | Typical Room Use | Planning Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 3600*1200*760 | Standard boardroom / training room | Supports structured meetings where laptops and documents share the surface; keep clear walkways for entry and presentation. |
| 4200*1500*760 | Large conference room / executive meeting | Designed for larger groups and wider collaboration zones; helps maintain a clean center even when many devices are connected. |
A conference table’s “quality” is felt in the moments people don’t talk about: when an assistant wipes the surface before a client arrives, when a laptop slides across the tabletop without snagging, when the table looks consistent under bright meeting-room lighting. This model uses Grade E1 board as the core material direction for commercial indoor spaces. Combined with high-quality hardware and a full powder-coating process (as specified in the product advantages), the table is built to handle repetitive daily use in office and school settings. Instead of aiming for decorative complexity, the design focuses on practical durability and a clean, modern presence—so the table keeps looking professional across years of meetings, not just on installation day.
Project-friendly material standard: Grade E1 board specified for controlled indoor use expectations.
Daily maintenance practicality: supports routine wipe-down and professional presentation.
Build consistency: hardware and finishing processes matter for long-term stability in busy rooms.
Power access is no longer a luxury feature—it’s the infrastructure of modern meetings. This conference table is designed with built-in power access via a premium double-sided socket function junction box, supporting participants on both sides of the table. That single detail changes meeting behavior: people stop clustering near walls, stop rotating seats to reach outlets, and stop running cords through walkways. The tabletop stays more open for collaboration because charging becomes part of the room, not an afterthought. While project requirements differ for data solutions, the table’s integrated approach supports a cleaner technology setup that procurement teams can standardize across multiple rooms. The best meeting experience is the one people don’t notice—because everything simply works as expected.
Double-sided access: supports both sides without cord-crossing chaos.
Cleaner device setup: reduces reliance on temporary power strips and improvised cables.
Better room equity: participants can plug in without fighting for “the outlet seat.”
Cable management is not just about appearance—it’s about safety, reset speed, and long-term room discipline. When cables have a planned path, meeting rooms stay calmer: fewer trip hazards near chair legs, fewer tangled cords under t