I setup a cool tank at my office last month.
I have a 5 Gallon Eclipse similar to the 15 described above. I installed a CustomSeaLife Smartlight 32W into the hood. I removed the filter media, and I am considering modifying the enclosed filter to make it into a skimmer using a small wooden airstone. I have a tiny heater and a small powerfilter to provide the current. I have a timer to provide reliable lighting through the weekend on an 8 hr. photoperiod.
Here is my livestock:
* 8 lbs. Live Sand (2-3 inches deep, I gave up some space for it, but I figure if I have to go skimmerless, I need loads of bio-)
* 10 lbs. of Live Tonga Branch and Fiji Rock, carefully selected for appearance
* Crushed Live Rock Frags in place of filter media
* Gorgeous Trumpet coral broken into 3 pieces to arrange in the tank
* Kenya tree frag from my 75 gallon at home
* ?Litophyton? Sp. frag from home
* Mushroom rock fragged from home
* Baby Xenia fragged from home
* Various Green Star Polyps fraggies
glued to Tonga from home
* $5 red mushroom from bottom of LFS tank
* baby Green Brittle Star (I know, I know- he will outgrow it and I will dump him at home!)
* 2 baby tank-raised Percula monkeyboys
* Awesome Hawaiian Feather Duster
* 2 Scarlet Hermits
* 4 Blue Legged Hermits
* 4 small Astrea Snails
I love having it here!

Now I can actually look at a reef instead of just reading and looking at pictures all day. I hope I never have to work hard, it will really cut into my addiction!!
BTW, everything seems very happy! The little Smartlight is really kicking in this tiny tank. Evaporation is surprisingly slow, I think the enclosed Eclipse hood helps with this tremendously. I top off with a little RO water once a week.
I don't think my bioload will be very bad- the percs are tiny and the star is probably my biggest contributor.
Oh, BTW- you asked about Jump Starting with established stuff. I used all Live sand and Live rock, mostly from my home tanks (I have 5, not counting the 20 gallon sump!) I put in all the rock and sand on a Friday, used water from home, on Monday I loaded the corals and added fish on Tuesday. Some may disagree with this rush, but since everything was cycled already (rock, water, sand), I
saw no reason to wait. :wink: