The two macs are under the table, so the connections between those are reasonable clear and accessable.
On the table is the rest, like the music machines.
Important is the shelf of
perspex on the back part of the studio table, for the two main TFT's enclosed by the two nearfields. Then, to the right, with the shelf slightly curved to the front direction there's the third TFT, placed up on a few effect plus midi patchbay, and the Lunas plus patchbay under them behind it.
A bit like a curved cockpit, as the left audio monitor is also placed in an oblique angle.
Under that shelf on the table are the connections between the table gear, I can look through the plexiglass and can get my hands on the cables laid down from left to right and reverse.
They are all reasonably accessable.
Behind the table there's the window with the windowsill, on which is the wooden shelf with all the currency parts.
All is reasonably accessable, but I admit it's never good enough
€jksuperstar: Adobe Illustrator. Vector based, so cristal clear at every size, but you have to organise the blocks in a decent way.
So in my case, in the upper pic I applied those not coulered parts in the patchbay and Machinedrum alined with the two lunas and the OS9 mac above, to serve the symmetry in favor of cable layout

.
That's what I learned from my first design trial (second pic).
Note: the best would be access from behind the table, but that's not always possible in typical home studio settings
