Laboratory Furniture Guide: Types, Materials, and How to Specify

Furnishing a laboratory is not like furnishing an office. Every piece of laboratory furniture must withstand chemicals, heat, moisture, and daily abuse while meeting strict safety and regulatory standards.

This guide covers the major categories of laboratory furniture, the materials used, and how to specify the right products for your lab type.

Major Categories of Lab Furniture

Laboratory Casework

Casework forms the foundation of any lab. These are the base cabinets, wall cabinets, and tall storage units that provide both work surfaces and storage. Key types include:

  • Fixed casework — permanently installed cabinets anchored to walls and floors. Most durable and cost-effective for stable lab layouts.
  • Modular casework — freestanding units that can be reconfigured as needs change. Ideal for labs that evolve frequently.
  • Suspended casework — cabinets hung from the countertop or wall, with open space below for cleaning and wheelchair access (ADA compliance).

Fume Hoods

Fume hoods are ventilated enclosures that protect lab workers from hazardous fumes, vapors, and particles. Types include:

Work Surfaces

Laboratory work surfaces must resist chemicals, heat, moisture, and impact. The main materials are:

  • Epoxy resin — best chemical resistance, industry standard for chemistry labs
  • Phenolic resin — good chemical resistance at lower cost, popular for education and biology labs
  • Stainless steel — sterilizable, ideal for healthcare and microbiology labs
  • Chemical-resistant laminate — budget option for light-duty applications

Laboratory Shelving

Laboratory shelving provides organized storage for reagents, supplies, and equipment. Wire shelving with NSF certification is the most common choice for regulated environments.

Healthcare and Clinical Furniture

Healthcare furniture for clinical labs requires extra attention to infection control, ergonomics, and regulatory compliance. Blood draw stations, pathology workstations, and antimicrobial surfaces are standard in this category.

Lab Furniture Materials

Cabinet Construction Materials

Material Strengths Best For Lifespan
Painted steel Durable, affordable, wide color range General labs, education 20+ years
Stainless steel Sterilizable, chemical resistant Healthcare, clean rooms, pharma 25+ years
Wood (maple, oak) Attractive, warm aesthetic Academic labs, offices adjacent to labs 15-20 years
Phenolic Moisture/chemical resistant, no metal to corrode Wet labs, humidity, coastal 20+ years
Polypropylene Extreme chemical resistance Acid storage, corrosive environments 15+ years

Choosing the Right Material

Match your cabinet material to your lab environment:

Laboratory floor plan showing furniture layout
  1. What chemicals are present? — Acid-heavy labs need phenolic or polypropylene. General chemistry can use painted steel.
  2. How wet is the environment? — Constant moisture rules out wood and standard steel without coating.
  3. Infection control requirements? — Healthcare and pharma labs need stainless steel or antimicrobial coated surfaces.
  4. Budget constraints? — Painted steel offers the best value. Phenolic provides a good middle ground.
  5. Aesthetic requirements? — Wood casework looks professional for labs that host visitors or donors.

Lab Bench Configurations

Island Benches

Freestanding workstations accessible from both sides. Provide the most workspace per square foot and encourage collaboration. Common in research and analytical labs.

Modern lab with complete furniture installation

Wall Benches

Placed against walls with services (gas, water, electrical) supplied from behind. Efficient use of wall space and easy utility access.

Peninsula Benches

Attached to a wall at one end and open at the other. A hybrid of island and wall configurations that provides good workspace with some wall-side utility access.

Sit-Stand Benches

Height-adjustable work surfaces that accommodate both seated and standing work. Essential for ergonomic compliance in labs where technicians work long shifts.

Utility Integration

Laboratory furniture must integrate with essential utilities:

Ergonomic laboratory furniture workspace design
  • Plumbing — lab sinks (cup sinks, trough sinks, drip cups), emergency eyewash stations, deionized water systems
  • Gas — gas turrets for natural gas, air, nitrogen, vacuum, and specialty gases
  • Electrical — 110V and 220V outlets, dedicated circuits for instruments, data ports
  • Ventilation — fume hood connections, snorkel exhaust, room air exchange

All utility connections should be planned during the design phase, not added as afterthoughts.

SEFA Standards

The Scientific Equipment and Furniture Association (SEFA) publishes industry standards for laboratory furniture. Key standards include:

  • SEFA 8 — the primary standard for laboratory furniture, covering structural requirements, material specifications, and testing methods
  • SEFA 2.3 — installation standards for laboratory casework
  • SEFA 3 — work surface standards including chemical resistance testing

Always specify SEFA-compliant furniture to ensure quality, durability, and safety.

Planning Your Lab Furniture

  1. Define your lab type — chemistry, biology, healthcare, education, or mixed-use
  2. List your processes — what procedures will be performed and what equipment is needed
  3. Identify utility needs — water, gas, electrical, ventilation, and data at each workstation
  4. Count personnel — how many people work simultaneously and what space each needs
  5. Plan for ADA — at least one accessible workstation per lab with proper clearances
  6. Consider future changes — modular furniture allows reconfiguration as research evolves

Labs USA provides free lab design services including furniture selection, layout planning, and full specification support for projects of any size.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the standard height for a lab bench?

Standing height lab benches are typically 36 inches. Sit-down benches are 30 inches. ADA-accessible benches require 28 to 34 inches of height with 27 inches of knee clearance below.

How long does lab furniture last?

Quality lab furniture lasts 20 to 25 years depending on material and use. Steel and stainless steel casework at the upper end, wood at the lower end. Work surfaces may need replacement sooner if exposed to aggressive chemicals.

Should I choose fixed or modular casework?

Choose fixed casework if your lab function is stable and won’t change significantly. Choose modular casework if your lab supports changing research programs, multi-user environments, or if you lease your space. Modular costs 10-20% more upfront but saves money on future reconfigurations.

Do I need a fume hood in every lab?

Any lab that uses volatile chemicals, generates fumes, or handles hazardous materials needs at least one fume hood. The number depends on how many people work with chemicals simultaneously and the volume of fume-generating work.

Can Labs USA help specify furniture for a new lab?

Yes. Labs USA offers complete furniture specification services at no cost, including material recommendations, layout design, 3D renderings, and detailed equipment lists. Contact us to start your project.

Who This Is For

Our laboratory furniture guide types materials and how to specify solutions are ideal for:

  • Laboratory directors
  • Facility architects
  • University science departments
  • Pharma/biotech companies
  • Hospital labs
  • Government research facilities

Lab Workstations & Tables: How to Choose the Right Bench for Your Lab

Lab workstations and tables are where science happens. Every experiment, analysis, and procedure starts at a bench — so choosing the right one directly impacts productivity, safety, and researcher comfort.

At Labs USA, we supply lab workstations from every major manufacturer. This guide helps you navigate the options and select the right bench for your specific laboratory application.

Types of Lab Workstations

Fixed-Height Lab Benches

The most common configuration. Standard heights are 30″ (sitting), 36″ (standing), and adjustable between. Fixed benches are the most stable and cost-effective option for general chemistry, biology, and teaching labs.

Adjustable-Height Lab Benches

Electric or manual height adjustment from 26″–42″ accommodates seated and standing work positions. Required for ADA compliance and increasingly popular for researcher ergonomics. Essential for shared labs where multiple users have different height preferences.

Island Benches

Freestanding benches accessible from all sides, typically placed in the center of the lab. Island benches maximize collaboration and workspace. Utilities (gas, water, electrical) are routed through overhead service carriers or through-floor conduits.

Peninsula Benches

Extend from a wall or casework line, accessible from three sides. A good compromise between wall benches and islands when floor space is limited.

Wall Benches

Mounted along walls with access from one side only. The most space-efficient configuration. Ideal for narrow labs and perimeter workstations.

Frame Materials

Steel (C-Frame & 4-Leg)

Welded steel frames offer the best strength-to-cost ratio. C-frame (cantilever) designs leave the space under the bench open for knee clearance and mobile storage. 4-leg frames are simpler and less expensive.

  • Pros: Strong, durable, chemical-resistant powder coat, most affordable
  • Cons: Industrial appearance, can show damage from impacts
  • Best for: General labs, teaching labs, industrial testing labs

Wood

Solid hardwood or plywood frames provide a traditional lab aesthetic. Wood-framed benches are popular in university settings and labs where appearance matters.

  • Pros: Warm aesthetic, vibration dampening, proven durability
  • Cons: Not suitable for wet environments, susceptible to water damage
  • Best for: University labs, dry chemistry, electronics, R&D

Phenolic

Solid phenolic resin frames are completely chemical-resistant and moisture-proof. The most durable option for aggressive chemical environments.

  • Pros: Waterproof, chemical-resistant, doesn’t corrode or swell
  • Cons: Most expensive frame material
  • Best for: Wet labs, cleanrooms, corrosive environments

Work Surface Materials

The countertop is just as important as the frame. Choose based on your chemical exposure:

Surface Chemical Resistance Heat Resistance Cost Best For
Epoxy resin Excellent 350°F $$$ Chemistry, biology, general labs
Phenolic resin Good 350°F $$ General chemistry, teaching labs
Stainless steel Excellent 1500°F+ $$$ Cleanrooms, medical, industrial
Chemical-resistant laminate Moderate 275°F $ Light chemistry, electronics
Polypropylene Excellent (acids) 180°F $$ Acid work, wet chemistry

For a deep dive, read our laboratory work surfaces comparison guide.

Standard Sizes

  • Width: 48″, 60″, 72″, 96″ (most common)
  • Depth: 24″, 30″, 36″ (30″ is standard for general labs)
  • Height: 30″ (seated), 36″ (standing), or adjustable 26″–42″

Integrated Services

Lab benches can integrate:

  • Gas outlets (natural gas, nitrogen, compressed air, vacuum)
  • Water (hot, cold, DI/RO) with cup sinks
  • Electrical outlets (110V, 208V, USB)
  • Data/network connections
  • Reagent shelving and overhead service carriers

Frequently Asked Questions

How much do lab workstations cost?

Basic lab tables start at $1,500–$3,000. Full-featured workstations with casework, services, and premium work surfaces range from $5,000–$15,000 per station. Custom configurations vary based on specification.

What height should a lab bench be?

30″ for seated work, 36″ for standing. Adjustable-height benches (26″–42″) are ideal for multi-user labs and ADA compliance. The right height depends on the primary work position and whether stools or chairs will be used.

How long do lab benches take to deliver?

Stock benches ship in 1–2 weeks. Standard configurations take 4–8 weeks. Custom benches take 8–16 weeks. Quick-ship options are available for urgent projects.

Get a Free Lab Layout

Send us your room dimensions and we’ll provide a free 3D lab layout with workstation recommendations, specifications, and pricing.

Request a free lab layout → or call (801) 999-8277.

Who This Is For

Our lab workstations tables selection guide solutions are ideal for:

  • Laboratory directors
  • Facility architects
  • University science departments
  • Pharma/biotech companies
  • Hospital labs
  • Government research facilities