Building your own...
Racks are fairly easy to make, essentially its a box with "MAP" rails installed 19.125" apart... for the purposes of saving space, I chose to make my racks as part of a "producer's desk", thus offering a dual-use. Also, by making the racks structural and permanent, I was able to locate a spot in the floor to bore a hole through, collar, and run the cabling through from the back of the console room to the front, interconnecting the gear at both ends. This might not be what you're doing, but you're welcomed to steal ideas for your own racks from the pictures.
Marking the floor in front of the vocal booth, chopping up the wood to appropriate lengths and widths:
This is the clever part. The vertical supports that the rack rails bolt to, are supported top and bottom by long strips, with 19.125" spacers between, so even though the wood is only 3/4" thick, with the two layers its 1.5" thick, making it much stronger, yet providing a "grove" for the "tongue" of the top and bottom of the rail supports to slip into, and be glued and screwed in. I made the top and the bottom supports at the same time, to ensure the racks were at true vertical. The bottom support gets screwed to the floor when this is completed.
Hard to see, but most of the bottom and top supports are done:
Two semi-completed racks sticking up. They are standing up based on the interference fit at the bottom, no screws or glue as of yet:
More progress:
Here is how I tied in the toop of the support, to the outer wall of the vocal booth. Pine, while flimsy in various aspects, does support compression loads very well. The compression takes place from the left side of the pic, pushing towards the right, onto the vocal booth wall which isn't going anywhere.
Another view of the same structure, all it needs is a countery top and some moulding:
Counter top, and side access door. I'll be drywalling over the side, and applying moulding along the bottom after the floor goes down (which it is, just haven't taken pictures yet) as well as moulding around the door:
Okay, console table.... well, I contacted Argosy for my special needs, and their price was way out of my ballpark, though I must admit I've always liked their workmanship, but money talks and I'd rather spend it on other things, so I opted to build my own table, out of steel, welding it together. One could easily build a table out of MDF, pine, oak, whatever suits your skillsets. Me, I can't make a square birdhouse to save my life, yet steel I find easy to work with. Mostly because if you miscut or misdrill into steel, you can weld it back together no problem. Wood, if its done wrong, you're tossing the wood and cutting another piece. Some people can glue wood and get it straight as before, I seemingly cannot. Anyway, here goes.
Table upside down, resting on sawhorses, while I weld the leg brackets on:
Completed, bolted together table (minus the legs):
Painting the table, disassembled:
Assembling in studio:
Dumping gear in/on:
Finished product: