I home school Owen and in order to position, support and
encourage correct posture when doing table work, Owen needed a height adjustable,
tilting, cut out table (there will be a future post about this item) and a
therapy bench. I sit behind him on the bench, to provide guidance
and support. In researching the therapy benches I discovered not only were they
nearly $800 (including delivery) but the one I was looking at took a maximum weight of 82
kgs, given that Owen is 25 kgs, that doesn't leave much left for me (or any
person for that matter). Quite by
accident I came across a picture on Pintrest of a PVC therapy bench someone had
made. There were no instructions but it
gave me enough to go on. The finished
product was around $100 and as he grows I just put longer legs on it, so it
grows with him.
Preparation
First, you need to work out how big you want your bench and
how tall. Talking to your child’s
therapists will help. Decide on what mm
PVC you want to use. We used 25 mm but
there was a 20mm option. All your
fittings must be the same mm.
What you need
From a hardware shop:
- PVC tubing (we bought 5 but could have got away with 4)
- 6 x T junction fittings. I use these for the "feet". You could use end caps instead, I just wanted a little bit more floor coverage.
- A piece of plywood for the bench top (we bought a 12mm x 1200mm x 396mm and cut to size)
- An outdoor furniture cushion to the size you want (if you are super handy you might be able to make your own).
- Stick on Velcro.
- Smallish wood screws for screwing the saddles into the plywood (we used 14 all up).
- A pkt of pressure pipe saddles (we used 7 saddles all up).
- Optional PVC glue (we did not use).
Order online:
- 4 x 3 way corner PVC joins (for the four extreme corners).
- 2x 4 way corner PVC joins (for the middle legs and cross support).
There are a number of ebay shops online that sell these specialist products. I used a company
called Klevercages https://www.klevercages.com.au/.
Tools:
- Screw driver
- Hacksaw (for the pvc)
- Woodsaw (for the plywood)
- Paper, pen to calculate the lengths you need to cut.
Instructions:
- Measure the inside of your T junctions, corner joins etc. You need to take this into consideration when cutting your PVC to get your bench the right height. This is the complex bit. Remember the measure twice, cut once rule.
- Cut your PVC and put the frame together, see the pictures I have shared. Use glue if you want (But don’t on the legs if you want to grow it).
- Cut your plywood and using the pipe saddles screw it to the frame. We used 7.
- Velcro the cushion on the top.
Enjoy!
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