Super! Instead of building a bar or McDonalds like your competitors, you felt the need to start acoffee shop.
You’ve done a great thing, earning money on the modern world’s connection to caffeine and expensive croissants.
To speak of the design of coffee tables you’ll put in your cafe, that is going to be strikingly different than the tables you’d think about putting in a coffee shop.
There’s a rationale for this sentiment: your furniture supplier, to simplify his life, has separate categories for cafe furniture and home furniture. Having said that, the usual kind of furniture you’re going to find in your coffee shop will be chairs, wooden stools and tables.
Taking that into consideration, you’ll have your fair share of chairs and a place to set your drink, or maybe even a upholstered booth or two, but most of the time, it’ll be the other styles.
The reason for this is that coffee shops are especially for customers to have their caffeine fix, maybe eat a sandwich, and take a load off.
Next to restaurants, which focus on feeding people, these types of establishments are more low key with a buddy, a chick, diary or plan to take over the world.
Also, think about the fact that coffee shops are significantly more social than restaurants. Unless we’re talking about a hybrid restaurant, chances are people aren’t in the restaurant to make friends and meet new people (special events excluded). In a cafe like this, by contrast, this is significantly more likely to occur.
Generally, people are all hopped up on coffee, so they’re chattier.
Add to this chairs, benches and coffee tables big enough to be appropriate for a handful of guests, then that makes a nice set up for a quaint little cafe.