Steelcase Amia Fabric Chair, Black
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Product Feature
- LiveLumbar technology contours to fit your spine for continuous lower back support
- Amia has a wide variety of seating adjustments and technologies, all packaged within its sleek design
- Up to 97-percent recyclable, SCS Indoor Advantage Gold and Cradle to Cradle(CM) certified for environmental performance
- Weight tested up to 300-pound
- Ships Fully Assembled
- Incorporates many seating advancements only seen on higher end chairs.
- Livelumbar technology flexes with movements for ergonomic comfort.
- Ships Fully Assembled and SCS Indoor Advantage Gold
- Up to 97-percent recyclable, pneumatic seat height, flexible seat edge, back tension, back lock, adjustable arms and seat depth.
- Weight tested up to 300 lbs. with no loss of performance
Product Description
Amia is made for sitting. It ��s a chair with comfort you can feel all day long.� Tucked away inside Amia� s trim backrest is one of its sitting secrets — the patent-pending LiveLumbar, a system of flexors that contour to fit your spine, giving you continuous support as you move in your chair throughout the day. And with Amia s other made-for-comfort features like 4-way adjustable arms, adjustable seat depth and seat height, and a flexible front seat edge, you can create the position that� �s ideal for you. Steelcase Amia chair complete features are pneumatic seat-height adjustment, adjustable LiveLumbar, flexible seat edge, height-width-pivot-depth adjustable arms, hard casters, upholstery/fabric, black plastic outer back, frame and base.Steelcase Amia Fabric Chair, Black Review
I work from home and spend a lot of time sitting in front of a computer. When I'm done with my work day I... end up spending even more time sitting in front of a computer. Up until this point I've used office chairs frequently found at brick-and-mortar office stores. You know the type: $50-100 for chairs made with plastic painted to look like metal, cheap leather seat covers and low-quality foam. They're okay, but I figure if I'm willing to spend several hundred dollars on a bike I might ride once or twice a week, shouldn't I spend at least that much money on a chair that I'm sitting in several hours a day, seven days a week?A friend of mine has a since-discontinued Steelcase chair that I liked a lot. I wanted a high quality but still fairly affordable chair and I decided to take a chance on the Amia because it was more affordable than other chairs in its class.
Pros
+ This is a really solid chair, very well built. The seat post doesn't wobble, the seating surface is firm and the frame made of metal and high quality plastics.
+ It comes pre-assembled so you don't have to spend an hour figuring which bolts go where, trying to line up canvas holes with wood holes underneath or screwing on that one caster that just doesn't seem to want to screw in properly.
+ It's very adjustable. You get the standard controls you find on most chairs: Hydraulic lift and a recline/no-recline toggle (and unlike some lower-end chairs I've owned, the toggle doesn't give the impression that it'll flip itself on or off out of the blue). There are several more adjustable items too, like the ability to slide the seating surface forward or back to match up with your body type. The seat-back torsion level is also quite nice, allowing you to customize just how much resistance you encounter when leaning back. The armrests can be raised and lowered and locked into place easily .
+ It's a sharp looking chair. It's not too big but not too small and it has a very clean, functional design.
+ It's quite comfortable too, even though it's firm. Or firm even though it's comfortable (depending on your firmness-versus-comfort priority).
Cons
- The arm rests. They can slide forward and back, move in or out, even pivot at up to a 45 degree angle all in the name of adjustment (the Steelcase-provided video on the product page highlights just how adjustable they are). The problem is that with the exception of the height, there's no locking mechanism once you get the arm rests in the desired position. This results in arm rests that can slide out of position when leaned on or grabbed. They can easily be maneuvered back into place, but it's an annoyance.
- It does creak a bit more than expected when reclining, but that may be the result of having the recline-torsion knob turned too tightly. I dialed it back a bit and that seemed to reduce (but not eliminate) the creaking.
The arm rest movement and creaky noises are annoyances, but they shouldn't distract from the bigger picture that this is a comfortable and well built chair.
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