Beautiful Charger... one of my favorite cars of all time.
This is a little late for you, but when I was designing/building my 40x50x14 shop, an electrician friend of mine recommended that I drop PVC conduit into the ground before I poured my concrete, starting from my planned electrical box location and running to the outer walls of the shop. The thought being that underground, I can run a straight shot from the panel to any place in the shop, and a straight line is the shortest distance which means less cost overall for installation. (Conduit and wiring) Instead of going up 10' from the box, then up to the roof peak, then down to the next wall, then over to the location that needs power, you just drop down 5' - 6' then shoot the diagonal, then come up 5' - 6' and you're done. So that's what I did... and he was right. I also saved myself from having to run a bunch of exposed conduit up at the ceiling. (I still have to run the conduit for the lighting... and that took me renting a man lift for a couple of days for the high work. (No way in hell I'd be on a ladder 20' in the air... not to mention climbing up/down and moving the ladder every couple of feet.)
For your shop, the first thing I would do is figure out what equipment you have, what you plan to buy soon, or will buy in the near future. That will drive what power is required, and where. Will you have a 2 or 4-post lift that needs power? Welder? Plasma Cutter? Drill Press? Where will your workbenches be, and will regular outlets suffice there or will you need more juice? Do you plan on adding HVAC? Will you run electric tools, or air powered? (Air ratchets, air guns, air chisel, etc...) If you will have an air compressor and plan on running air lines around the shop, you can plan those along with the conduits so you're not getting them into each others way.
For my shop, I decided I wanted a lot of light. I installed 30 - 8' long LED lights, and I wired them into three zones/bays. My main 12x12 shop door is dead center in the west facing 50' wall, so I wired it based on that being the 'center bay' that is about 12' wide, with a 'left bay' and 'right bay' that are approximately 19' wide, respectively. I have three light switches on the wall so I can turn on/off each bay independently. When I'm actively working in there, I kick all of the lights on... but if I'm just running into the shop to grab something, I just hit the center bay lights so I don't smash into something.
If you have a minute, can you post up pics of where your electrical panel will be located in the shop? Proposed workbench locations? That will help for planning out where things should go.
Hope this helps.
Mark