Should the changing room and workshop use the same cabinet family?
Usually not. A changing room solves clothing, compartment split and user access, while a workshop works under very different loads and tool-storage logic.
Sector: workplaces
Storage for workshops, changing rooms, maintenance and staff support areas where tools, clothing, PPE and shared equipment must stay organised.
Recommended families

Product family
A family of workshop cabinets for industry, maintenance, technical support areas and professional workshops. In practice, this makes it easier to match the right variant to facility scale, expected load and daily use without mixing models at random.

Product family
Compact janitorial models for office buildings, technical rooms, public facilities and multi-user organizations. In practice, this makes it easier to match the right variant to facility scale, expected load and daily use without mixing models at random.

Product family
Staff locker models designed for changing rooms with limited floor area and high organizational requirements. In practice, this makes it easier to match the right variant to facility scale, expected load and daily use without mixing models at random.

Product family
Classic staff lockers for workplaces, administration, logistics and facilities that need orderly changing-room infrastructure.

Product family
A family of WZD wardrobes for staff changing rooms, welfare areas, public facilities and multi-user environments. In practice, this makes it easier to match the right variant to facility scale, expected load and daily use without mixing models at random.
Representative models
Related knowledge
A guide to filing cabinets, office cabinets and reinforced storage from the perspective of organizations that must control access to documents and devices.
How to build cabinet sets for technical, critical and multi-site facilities with emphasis on continuity and ease of rollout.
Usually not. A changing room solves clothing, compartment split and user access, while a workshop works under very different loads and tool-storage logic.
The most common problem is buying isolated models without reference to the site-wide standard. A stronger setup comes from defining a few families for clear roles and keeping that structure over time.