https://chatgpt.com/s/t_6976ed62e72c81918b36048cf46a97cc
Short answer: yes, butcher block can work with that cut-out—but only if you design the support correctly. If you don’t, that notch becomes a stress concentrator and you’ll eventually get sagging or cracking right at the cut.
Let’s walk this through like a builder, not Pinterest.
A 70" × 30" butcher block is basically a wide beam.
When you cut a 4–6" wide × ~12" deep notch into the wall side, you’re:
Removing material **exactly where bending forces are highest**
Creating two narrow “arms” on either side of the notch that want to flex independently
Even without monitors on it, a desk this wide will sag over time if it’s only wall-mounted on one side and file cabinets on the other—especially with a notch.
So the butcher block itself is strong, but the opening changes the rules.
Butcher block is **≥1.75" thick** (2" is ideal)
Wood is **edge-grain hardwood** (maple, birch, beech—not bamboo)
The notch corners are **rounded**, not sharp (radius ≥ 1")
You add **continuous support along the wall side**
File cabinets are **tight to the underside** and not floating
Block is 1.5" or thinner