Ten feet is the length most growing teams land on. It seats 8 to 10 people around one surface, which covers a department stand-up, a client presentation, or a training session without the table feeling empty for smaller groups. The two-piece top is a practical detail more than a cosmetic one: a single 10-foot slab is awkward to move through doors and hallways, while the two halves carry in easily and join into one continuous surface once they are in the room.
The three-section panel base does double duty. It supports the long top evenly so there is no sag in the middle, and the sections route cables internally, so a laptop-driven meeting does not end up with cords crossing the floor. Add the optional power module if you want power and data built into the surface. Plan the room around the table plus 36 to 42 inches of clearance on every side, which lands the minimum room at roughly 19 by 13 feet.
The base is a three-section panel design with built-in wire management running between the sections, so cables route from a tabletop power module down through the base and out of sight. The table is compatible with an optional integrated power module if you want power and data built into the surface for a laptop-driven meeting room.
As a 10 foot conference table, it works as a 10 person conference table for a department meeting, a training session, or a client presentation. Plan for at least 36 to 42 inches of clearance on each side so chairs pull out and people can move behind seated guests, which puts the minimum room size around 19 by 13 feet.