Colin Len
Well-known member
Starting a garage renovation shortly. Some roof framing fixes are up first, followed by converting the door to a high lift that follows ceiling, then all new elec, insulation and drywall. So, time to start planning the lighting as I want to figure that out before we start elec.
Garage info:
17' x 19' (~320sqft)
Ceiling is sloped (~8.5' at the low point, ~11.5' at the high point)
Walls/ceiling will be painted white or close to it
Floor will be a greyish epoxy
Below is a basic sketchup model I started, but clearly pretty devoid of detail so far

Garage Use Info:
Garage is about as multi-purpose as it gets. I'll have a computer desk where I will often work from home, wood and metal top benches for various projects. I also store one car inside. I primarily do automotive work but regularly also work on various wood, metal and misc projects. I'd prefer LED and I'd prefer flush/recess (really don't want any hanging fixtures.) I was thinking it may be ideal to have two zones for the ceiling lights so that I could normally have only some lights on then turn more on when I need maximum brightness. I may also add some task lighting to the workspaces (which will line the left wall).
I tried using on of those lighting calculators but am not too familiar with this stuff so not sure if I am making any mistakes or oversights. Not even 100% sure I entered the correct light type, although I think it should be close. And of course this is showing a flat ceiling (chose to use 10' to split the difference for my angled ceiling).
These are the lights I'm considering: https://www.homedepot.com/p/Lithoni...ure-CPANL-2X4-40LM-SWW7-120-TD-DCMK/316872155

Seems many recommend shooting for 70-100fc so I set the calculator above to 70fc and got the result you see above. Seems like that's a lot of fixtures for such a small space but what do I know? And of course, layout would need to be changed due to the sloped ceiling, the fact there there's a ridge beam running across the space and the garage door will cover a lot of the ceiling.
Was hoping to get some opinions on how much lighting I may need and whether I'm looking at decent fixtures or not. Thanks!
Garage info:
17' x 19' (~320sqft)
Ceiling is sloped (~8.5' at the low point, ~11.5' at the high point)
Walls/ceiling will be painted white or close to it
Floor will be a greyish epoxy
Below is a basic sketchup model I started, but clearly pretty devoid of detail so far

Garage Use Info:
Garage is about as multi-purpose as it gets. I'll have a computer desk where I will often work from home, wood and metal top benches for various projects. I also store one car inside. I primarily do automotive work but regularly also work on various wood, metal and misc projects. I'd prefer LED and I'd prefer flush/recess (really don't want any hanging fixtures.) I was thinking it may be ideal to have two zones for the ceiling lights so that I could normally have only some lights on then turn more on when I need maximum brightness. I may also add some task lighting to the workspaces (which will line the left wall).
I tried using on of those lighting calculators but am not too familiar with this stuff so not sure if I am making any mistakes or oversights. Not even 100% sure I entered the correct light type, although I think it should be close. And of course this is showing a flat ceiling (chose to use 10' to split the difference for my angled ceiling).
These are the lights I'm considering: https://www.homedepot.com/p/Lithoni...ure-CPANL-2X4-40LM-SWW7-120-TD-DCMK/316872155

Seems many recommend shooting for 70-100fc so I set the calculator above to 70fc and got the result you see above. Seems like that's a lot of fixtures for such a small space but what do I know? And of course, layout would need to be changed due to the sloped ceiling, the fact there there's a ridge beam running across the space and the garage door will cover a lot of the ceiling.
Was hoping to get some opinions on how much lighting I may need and whether I'm looking at decent fixtures or not. Thanks!