I have made a piece of furniture that is over 2m high, almost 1m wide and less than 0.5m deep (front to back). It sits on castors fixed beneath a false bottom and hidden by a skirt that almost reaches the floor. To allow the castors to rotate freely through 360 degrees without hitting the skirt they are mounted inboard from the edges, so the footprint ends up quite narrow front to back. I am concerned that it would be easy for this piece of furniture to topple over if pulled. OK, it is a bad design and I should have thought of this before I built it, but it is what it is now and I want to find a way to prevent it coming down and injuring someone. Is there a neat, common solution to this problem or do I just roll my own?
The piece will sit against a wall (just held forward by the skirting) so the obvious approach is to use the wall in some way.
I first thought of screwing a bracket to the wall and to the top of the piece. I don't like this because if the piece moves slightly - say someone leans against the piece or sits on a seat that is incorporated into the design) it may eventually work the screws loose. Also I may need to move the piece occasionally for cleaning behind it or to make a gangway and a permanent fixing might be a hassle.
My next thought was to use a short piece of chain instead of a bracket, so it would only come into play if the piece were falling, and minor movements wouldn't matter. I could put the chain on a hook so removing it to move the piece would be easier than dealing with screws.
I also thought of putting some shelf brackets (without a shelf) on the wall and protruding just above the top of the piece. If the piece were pulled over the top would tilt and hit these brackets, but not being attached to them it would not be a problem to move the piece when necessary.
Am I over-thinking this? What is the best solution?
The piece will sit against a wall (just held forward by the skirting) so the obvious approach is to use the wall in some way.
I first thought of screwing a bracket to the wall and to the top of the piece. I don't like this because if the piece moves slightly - say someone leans against the piece or sits on a seat that is incorporated into the design) it may eventually work the screws loose. Also I may need to move the piece occasionally for cleaning behind it or to make a gangway and a permanent fixing might be a hassle.
My next thought was to use a short piece of chain instead of a bracket, so it would only come into play if the piece were falling, and minor movements wouldn't matter. I could put the chain on a hook so removing it to move the piece would be easier than dealing with screws.
I also thought of putting some shelf brackets (without a shelf) on the wall and protruding just above the top of the piece. If the piece were pulled over the top would tilt and hit these brackets, but not being attached to them it would not be a problem to move the piece when necessary.
Am I over-thinking this? What is the best solution?