Aside from obvious use in garages and workshops, this is a great idea if you live in a small space and don't have room for a more capacious tool chest and would also like a short, mobile stool. Would also be an ideal "my first toolbox" gift for a kid. This has a fair amount of storage, rolls smoothly, is sturdy (at least for someone who is not huge), provides a useful seat, and takes up little room if you fold up the sides. The drawers "catch" a little when you close them (in an intentional way), so they do not just open by themselves; you have to want them to open. They come with liners, which was a nice touch. Easy to put together in 30 min. or less by one person, with vary basic tools (couple of crescent wrenches or socket drivers, and a Phillips screwdriver). Just make sure all the bolts are going upward; if you build it wrong, with the cap nuts on the bottom, they'll interfere with the rotation of the casters. I'm using this on a hardwood floor and the wheels are not leaving marks. But I only weigh about 165 lb. If you weight 325, who knows? Unlike the ones a few reviewers had issues with, mine did not arrive with any missing parts or holes drilled in the wrong places. It all was just right. The only down side I can think of is the huge ugly orange logo, but it was worth it to get this for about 20% less than every other variant of this (several sellers, but all clearly getting from the same factor, and just putting different branding on it).As other commenters have noted, you can do various modifications of it with comparatively little effort:* Over-stuff the seat.* Hinge the seat, and use sheet metal to close off the gaps under the seat, creating an additional storage compartment.* Replace the casters with taller or shorter ones, or more heavy-duty ones (threaded, though; this doesn't use the snap-in post found on office chair casters). I think I will get some taller ones, with wheel locks.* Add on magnetic stuff, like a nuts-and-bolts cup.