Open Front

High-volume booths tucked between neighbors

Open Front booth layout diagram
Drawn to scale · view from above · aisle at the marked edge

The retail-store version of a 10x10. Tables hug the back and sides, and the whole front is open — no table between you and the aisle. It's the layout that moves the most product: bath and body, pet treats, stickers, prints, anything where you want as many people inside as possible. The whole booth reads "walk in" from 20 feet away, which is the point. The trade-off: no front barrier means you need eyes on everything, so checkout position matters. This is the strongest layout when you're sandwiched between other vendors and can't rely on a corner to pull attention.

What you’ll use

The pieces that make up this layout. Each color matches the category pill you’ll see in the editor — so the diagram above reads the same as the app.

  • 1×8ft TableTables
  • 3×Gridwall PanelDisplays
  • 2×6ft TableTables
  • 1×Payment CounterTables
TablesDisplays

Tips from the setup

  1. 01

    Build vertical on the back wall — gridwall or shelving up to 6 feet. That's what pulls people in from the aisle.

  2. 02

    Checkout goes in a back corner, not the middle. Don't block your own hero display.

  3. 03

    Side tables for mid-priced browse-and-grab. Premium goes on the back wall.

  4. 04

    Light the back wall if you can. A lit back pulls people in from across the room.

Other layouts to consider

Make this layout your own

Free to start. Move things around to match your actual gear. Save it once, reuse it every event.