BryceW
Active member
In December my wife and I finally purchased the house we've been renting for the last two years. During these two years I've endured a complete lack of proper lighting in the garage and I'm looking forward to finally rectifying that.
I've got a blank slate to work with here. The ceiling and walls were all covered in nasty old 1/4" plywood which I have begun removing. It will be replaced with drywall (at least on the shared house walls) as this is an attached garage. The space is used strictly as a workshop, not for parking. I mainly do metal fabrication.
For lights I'd like to do something different from standard T8 bulbs, so I'm planning on going with these 4400 lumen LEDs: https://www.1000bulbs.com/product/193112/KEY-GGL50.html?gclid=Cj0KEQjwmIrJBRCRmJ_x7KDo-9oBEiQAuUPKMtRB_nRW4Aw0aMfl3lhE5OIHVHR4cP-JbZI19UTlOcYaAlf48P8HAQ
Since I'm in South Carolina and the heat/humidity can get pretty intense I'd also like to install a fan of some sort. I'm thinking one of these from Home Depot but I'm open to suggestions. My ceiling is 9'10" so I have to have something that doesn't hang too low
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Hampton-Bay-60-in-Black-Industrial-Ceiling-Fan-26829/205791277
As for the layout below is what I was thinking via a quick sketchup drawing. It posted a little small so if you can't make out the dimensions it's 19' deep by 19'9" wide at the back wall, 27' across the front wall with a 16' door.
In the drawing the two lights closest to the front wall appear to be blocked by the raised door. I plan on working around this by building arms that extend under the garage door to hold the lights. I've installed a high lift kit and jackshaft opener so the underside of the door is only 8" below the ceiling (thread on that later).
I have approximately zero expertise in the area of light distribution so if anybody's got a better idea I'm all ears. With a white ceiling and light grey walls will this be enough light? If not I've got room in the budget to add more and I'd rather do it right the first time before I drywall everything.
View media item 70902
I've got a blank slate to work with here. The ceiling and walls were all covered in nasty old 1/4" plywood which I have begun removing. It will be replaced with drywall (at least on the shared house walls) as this is an attached garage. The space is used strictly as a workshop, not for parking. I mainly do metal fabrication.
For lights I'd like to do something different from standard T8 bulbs, so I'm planning on going with these 4400 lumen LEDs: https://www.1000bulbs.com/product/193112/KEY-GGL50.html?gclid=Cj0KEQjwmIrJBRCRmJ_x7KDo-9oBEiQAuUPKMtRB_nRW4Aw0aMfl3lhE5OIHVHR4cP-JbZI19UTlOcYaAlf48P8HAQ
Since I'm in South Carolina and the heat/humidity can get pretty intense I'd also like to install a fan of some sort. I'm thinking one of these from Home Depot but I'm open to suggestions. My ceiling is 9'10" so I have to have something that doesn't hang too low
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Hampton-Bay-60-in-Black-Industrial-Ceiling-Fan-26829/205791277
As for the layout below is what I was thinking via a quick sketchup drawing. It posted a little small so if you can't make out the dimensions it's 19' deep by 19'9" wide at the back wall, 27' across the front wall with a 16' door.
In the drawing the two lights closest to the front wall appear to be blocked by the raised door. I plan on working around this by building arms that extend under the garage door to hold the lights. I've installed a high lift kit and jackshaft opener so the underside of the door is only 8" below the ceiling (thread on that later).
I have approximately zero expertise in the area of light distribution so if anybody's got a better idea I'm all ears. With a white ceiling and light grey walls will this be enough light? If not I've got room in the budget to add more and I'd rather do it right the first time before I drywall everything.
View media item 70902