February 8, 2008 6:05 AM PST

Are expensive, green, ergonomic, office chairs worth it?

Think chair

(Credit: Steelcase)

We spend lots of time with electronic gadgets and most of it sitting on our behinds. Xbox and iPhone may get all the press, but one of the most important gadgets in your office is your desk chair.

Think a chair isn't a gadget? Have you checked out the controls on any of these ergonomic chairs lately? Some of them are even licensing the technology for use in other markets.

I recently looked into the options and finally settled on a Think chair from Steelcase. The manufacturer markets Think as "The chair with a brain and a conscience." It's supposed to adjust itself to your body. But it isn't cheap.

Here's how I ended up with Think and my assessment of the product. Keep in mind that I don't review products for a living. That said, I am compulsive; my wife says I overanalyze everything. So when it came to the chair for my home office, I took it very seriously.

You see, I work at home - a lot - so I spend beacoup time in my desk chair. I'm also 50 and my back isn't in the greatest shape. I started with an old desk chair I'd had for years, but 4 years ago I bought a new chair online for $275. I thought I was getting an ergonomic leather chair for a good deal. Not exactly. Sure, there were lots of controls and adjustments, but amazingly, they didn't combine to create an ergonomic or even a comfortable chair. Also, the leather was cheap.

After some research, I figured out that you could spend a couple hundred bucks for a cheap knockoff or $600 plus, and I mean plus, for the real deal; there's no in-between. My back didn't like the cheap route, so this time I decided to do it right.

I narrowed my search down to chairs that got the best reviews: the Aeron by Herman Miller, the Freedom by HumanScale, the Ergohuman by Eurotech, the Leap chair by Steelcase, and a few others.

That's when I realized that some of these chairs were really, really ugly, especially from the back. My house is kind of old world and I didn't want my office to look like a hospital room for a paraplegic (no offense) or something out of the movie Alien.

Call me old-fashioned, but I don't really appreciate the benefits of mesh, either. I prefer the comfort and feel of leather. I also didn't want a zillion controls that depend on my ability to determine what's right for my back. I wanted a simple chair that was designed to adapt.

The Leap chair from Steelcase met all that criteria. Its patented "live back" technology, intuitive controls, and classic design, were exactly what I was looking for. There was only one problem: it didn't come with a headrest, not even an optional one. I really wanted a headrest.

As it turns out, Steelcase had another chair called Think.

Think incorporates much of the Leap chair's technology, plus its controls are even more intuitive. Not only does it conform to your spine, but the back tension is proportional to your body weight. It also has an optional headrest and was a bit less expensive than the Leap chair.

And for all you green techies out there, get this: Think is so green that Mother Nature's green with envy. It's 99% recyclable, Greenguard Indoor Air Quality Certified, and it's cradle-to-cradle certified by MBDC - which evaluates a product's environmental impact throughout its lifecycle.

Getting a good deal on such a hot product was a little tough, until I found Office Environments - an authorized Steelcase dealer in Charlotte, North Carolina. I got the chair - loaded with the features, materials and colors I specified - for about $900 plus state sales tax. And the folks at Office Environments provided world-class, personalized service that met my ultra-high internet shopping standards.

I love this chair. I know that sounds like an advertisement for an expensive product, but for me, it's worth it. What kind of chair do you sit on?

Originally posted at Train Wreck
Steve Tobak is managing partner of Invisor Consulting LLC. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 8 comments (Page 1 of 1)
900 dollars!!
by February 8, 2008 7:18 AM PST
i bought a cheap chair at officemax for 90 bucks. spending 900 bucks on a chair (not a couch, not theater seating) is crazy. i could buy a new one every year for ten years!
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Expensive Chairs - Definitely Worth It!
by kronosport February 8, 2008 8:50 AM PST
We spend the majority of our days sitting in a chair - why not invest in one that is ergonomic, comfortable & green? I've owned the Herman Miller Aeron chair for over six years and I love it! Definitely worth the $600+ investment.
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Maybe It Is Worth The Investment...
by michaelportent February 8, 2008 11:17 AM PST
I've been sitting in cheap $60 office chairs for the last 6 years of my career and my back has been getting progressively worse. I think maybe if I bought a really spendy one a long time ago that it probably would have paid for itself in Chiropractor visits by now.
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Placebo Effect...
by Goofball666 February 8, 2008 12:19 PM PST
In 2000 I was working at a dot com, working start up hours. I found that the chairs supplied by the company were not comfortable and after extra long days my back was usually sore. I spent the money to get an Aeron for myself, taking it with me each time we changed offices. After the dot com burst and I was freelancing the chair has become a permanent fixture in my home office. After 8 years the chair had held up well, with only the lumbar support getting a bit worn (which has since been redesigned - I believe). Bottom line - I enjoy my Aeron and would probably replace it if needed. I can't say if its a bit of the placebo effect, that a $700 chair is significantly more comfortable than a good $200 chair, but I've had a positive experience with my spendy chair. One a side note, there are companies that buy and resell office furniture from failed companies. With some picky shopping it might be possible to find a used Aeron for a lot less than a new one.
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Worth the price, sort of
by bizjama February 8, 2008 1:09 PM PST
Particularly if you sit a lot, it's definitely worth the price paying a little more for a good chair, but hundreds of dollars? I'm sure they're great chairs, good for your body (particularly if, like the author, you have back issues), but there has to be a point where you go well beyond ROI. If I had the money, I'd definitely go for. Since I don't, that line for me is around $150. :-) Rich http://www.bizjama.com
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Ebay costs £42+12 for offy chair plus cushion=£54.
by nasacouk February 9, 2008 9:02 AM PST
or 106USD,CAD/73EUROs etc Apparently to be anal the sides make a chair but I'd just get a new ' Coccyx ' pressure cushion for example and as they say forget-about-it. You can spend the saved money on paying someone to spend half an hour erecting it and when you get arsed about the back pain just flip the cushion over and thus any excessive stress, or poorly-managed stress, may otherwise leave cortisol levels tied to stimulate your appetite, with the end result being weight gain or difficulty losing unwanted pounds Iguess.
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Great Sire for Think Chairs
by Daniel1127 February 10, 2008 1:55 PM PST
Check out www.OfficeDesigns.com. They had a ton of Think chairs in stock. I bought mine from there and they shipped it for free. I'd definitely check them out first the next time I look for another chair.
Reply to this comment
by ross5891 May 13, 2008 3:15 AM PDT
I found this site http://www.mix-match.biz which has logo links for big furniture companies such as Steelcase and Herman Miller going through to there latest chairs. Through it might help instead of routing around search engines!
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