Room Measurement Shopping Card

Build a practical room dimensions card and shopping limits checklist for furniture, curtains, rugs, and storage purchases without making construction or structural claims.

Audits

Pass

Install

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Room Measurement Shopping Card

Overview

Room Measurement Shopping Card helps users capture the practical dimensions and constraints they need before buying furniture, curtains, rugs, storage bins, appliances, or decor. The output is a phone-ready or printable room dimensions card plus a photo checklist and shopping limit summary.

This skill focuses on everyday measuring and shopping preparation. It does not provide construction advice, structural safety claims, engineering guidance, load-bearing analysis, or installation instructions that should be handled by qualified professionals.

When to Use

Use this skill when the user is preparing to buy:

  • Furniture such as sofas, beds, desks, dressers, shelves, or tables
  • Curtains, blinds, rugs, or room dividers
  • Storage bins, closet organizers, or shelving units
  • Small appliances or fixtures that must fit a space
  • Moving or delivery items that must pass through doors, halls, stairs, or elevators

Trigger phrases: "Will this furniture fit", "Help me measure a room", "Room measurement checklist", "Buying curtains what should I measure", "Furniture shopping dimensions", "What measurements do I need before checkout"

Required Inputs

Ask for the purchase type and the room or area. Then gather only the relevant details:

  • Room name and intended item
  • Existing measurements the user already has
  • Doorway, hallway, stair, elevator, or delivery route constraints
  • Clearance needs for walking, drawers, doors, chairs, reclining, or cleaning
  • Any product dimensions under consideration
  • Return policy deadline or delivery constraints if known

If the user has not measured yet, give a checklist rather than guessing.

Workflow

Step 1 - Map the Shopping Goal

Clarify what the user is buying and where it will go:

  • Item type
  • Desired placement
  • How people move through the room
  • Whether the item opens, extends, reclines, rolls, or needs ventilation
  • Whether the item must be delivered through tight routes

Step 2 - Capture Core Room Dimensions

Guide the user to measure:

  • Room length and width
  • Ceiling height if item is tall, stacked, or hanging
  • Wall segment lengths where the item may sit
  • Distance from corners to outlets, switches, vents, windows, radiators, or built-ins
  • Baseboards, trim, uneven floors, or other minor obstacles that affect fit

Recommend measuring twice and writing units clearly.

Step 3 - Capture Openings and Delivery Route

For furniture and large items, include:

  • Door width and height
  • Hallway width
  • Stair width and landing depth
  • Elevator door and interior dimensions if applicable
  • Tight turns, railings, low ceilings, or narrow thresholds
  • Parking, building access, or delivery appointment requirements

Do not guarantee delivery success. Encourage checking the retailer's delivery rules.

Step 4 - Capture Use Clearance

Convert raw room measurements into practical shopping limits:

  • Walking path clearance
  • Chair pull-out space
  • Drawer and cabinet swing clearance
  • Door swing clearance
  • Bedside or sofa-side access
  • Curtain stack and rod placement needs
  • Rug border and furniture-on-rug preference
  • Cleaning and maintenance access

When uncertain, use conservative limits and recommend verifying with product documentation.

Step 5 - Build the Room Measurement Shopping Card

Create a concise card with:

  • Room name
  • Purchase goal
  • Must-fit dimensions
  • Maximum product dimensions
  • Clearance reminders
  • Delivery route constraints
  • Photos to take
  • Questions to ask before checkout

Use placeholders where measurements are missing.

Step 6 - Add the Photo Checklist

Suggest photos that help avoid mistakes:

  • Wide shot of the room
  • Each wall where the item may sit
  • Doors, halls, stairs, elevator, and tight turns
  • Outlets, vents, switches, windows, radiators, and baseboards
  • Existing furniture that must stay
  • Tape measure in frame for key spaces when practical

Step 7 - Final Pre-Checkout Check

Before the user buys, prompt them to verify:

  • Product dimensions, including packaging dimensions for delivery
  • Assembly requirements and whether the item can be moved in pieces
  • Weight, wall-mount, and installation requirements with the retailer or manufacturer
  • Return window, restocking fees, and pickup or return shipping rules
  • Color, material, and care requirements

Do not state that a wall, ceiling, shelf, or floor can support weight unless the user has professional confirmation or manufacturer-rated fixtures.

Output Format

Use this structure:

  1. Shopping Goal - item and room
  2. Measure This First - checklist by category
  3. Room Measurement Card - filled fields and placeholders
  4. Shopping Limits - max dimensions and clearance notes
  5. Photo Checklist - what to capture on the phone
  6. Pre-Checkout Questions - retailer/manufacturer checks

Safety Boundaries

  • No construction, structural, engineering, electrical, plumbing, or load-bearing claims.
  • Do not guarantee that an item will fit; provide a practical checklist and risk flags.
  • Recommend verifying retailer, manufacturer, lease, building, and delivery rules when relevant.
  • For wall-mounted, ceiling-mounted, heavy, or child-safety-critical items, recommend professional or manufacturer guidance.
  • Do not advise drilling, anchoring, modifying walls, removing doors, or altering structures.

Acceptance Criteria

  1. Response produces a practical room measurement checklist for the intended purchase.
  2. Response converts measurements into shopping limits and clearance reminders.
  3. Response includes delivery route and obstacle checks when relevant.
  4. Response includes a phone photo checklist.
  5. Response reminds the user to verify product, packaging, return, and delivery rules.
  6. Response avoids construction, structural, installation, or load-bearing claims.

Examples

Example 1: Sofa Shopping

User says: "I'm buying a sofa for a small living room. What do I need to measure?"

Skill guides: Collect room size, wall segment, walking paths, door and hallway dimensions, stair or elevator constraints, and product dimensions. Output a card with maximum sofa width/depth, clearance reminders, and delivery route photos.

Example 2: Curtains

User says: "I need curtains for my bedroom window."

Skill guides: Ask for window width and height, desired curtain length, rod placement area, obstacles, and preferred fullness. Include photos of the window, trim, nearby furniture, radiator, and wall space above the frame. Avoid installation claims.

Example 3: Wall Shelf Safety Boundary

User says: "Can this shelf hold my books if I mount it here?"

Skill responds: Do not make structural or load-bearing claims. Help list measurements and product questions, then direct the user to manufacturer ratings, proper anchors, lease rules, and a qualified installer if needed.