From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishworkbenchwork‧bench /ˈwɜːkbentʃ $ ˈwɜːrk-/ noun [countable]
TICTZa strong table used for working on with tools

Examples from the Corpus
workbench• There was a workbench along the wall and parts all over the place.• It is far better than any workbench or some dumb old tree.• Example: The birth of a robot A new robot is screwed down on to its workbench.• I never had my own workbench, although I would often sit beside my father as he worked at his.• You can also use a portable workbench as a vice to hold larger items.• I loved the metallic smell of solder as it dripped in small puddles, hardening on the workbench before me.• They clattered on as far as the door; under workbenches, into cracks, finding every obscure corner.