Direct Answer: Retail: prioritize CRI (Ra ≥ 90) and accent lighting at 3,000K. Office: prioritize UGR < 19 and uniform 40–50 lm/sq ft at 4,000K. Retail with Ra ≥ 95 reports 8–15% higher per-customer spending. Offices with UGR < 19 pendants report 20% fewer eye strain complaints.
Every commercial space has distinct lighting requirements driven by its function. The table below distills the critical specifications — CCT, CRI minimum, lighting power density (LPD), and the key design metric — for six major commercial space types.
| Commercial Space | CCT | CRI Min | LPD (W/sq ft) | Key Metric |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Retail (clothing) | 3,000–3,500K | Ra ≥ 90 | 1.0–1.5 | Accent:ambient ≥ 3:1 |
| Retail (grocery) | 3,500–4,000K | Ra ≥ 90 | 1.2–1.8 | High uniformity |
| Retail (jewelry) | 3,000K | Ra ≥ 95 | 1.5–2.0 | Pin-spot on displays |
| Open office | 3,500–4,000K | Ra ≥ 80 | 0.7–0.9 | UGR < 19, direct/indirect |
| Private office | 3,000–4,000K | Ra ≥ 80 | 0.6–0.8 | Personal control |
| Conference room | 3,000–4,000K | Ra ≥ 90 | 0.8–1.0 | Dimmable, zoning |
Choosing the right fixture type for each commercial space is the single highest-leverage design decision. This tool maps application to fixture type, critical specifications, and expected cost per square foot for a complete lighting package.
| Application | Best Fixture | Key Specs | Cost/Sq Ft |
|---|---|---|---|
| Retail clothing | Track + linear ambient | Ra ≥ 90, 3,000K, accent spots | $5–8/sq ft |
| Retail grocery | Linear suspended + under-shelf | Ra ≥ 90, 3,500K | $4–6/sq ft |
| Open-plan office | Direct/indirect linear pendant | UGR < 19, 4,000K, 40–50 lm/sq ft | $4–7/sq ft |
| Private office | LED panel + dimmer | UGR < 19, 3,000–4,000K | $3–5/sq ft |
| Conference room | LED panel + wall washer | Dimmable, Ra ≥ 90, multi-scene | $6–9/sq ft |
Retail and office spaces have fundamentally different lighting objectives. Retail needs accent lighting — high-contrast directional light that draws the eye to merchandise displays and creates visual hierarchy. Office needs uniform task light — evenly distributed illumination across work surfaces with minimal shadow and zero glare on screens. A fixture optimized for one application will fail in the other. Track lighting in an open office creates harsh shadows and screen glare; a uniform 2×4 panel in a clothing store makes everything look flat and uninviting.
UGR (Unified Glare Rating) is the standardized metric for discomfort glare in indoor lighting — but it's the most commonly overlooked specification in office procurement. The numbers are stark: at UGR 22, approximately 40% of occupants perceive uncomfortable glare. At UGR 19 (the EN 12464-1 threshold for office spaces), that drops to under 15%. Every UGR point above 19 carries a measurable cost in occupant comfort, productivity, and complaint resolution. Always request UGR tables from fixture manufacturers — not just a single UGR value, but the full UGR table across standard room geometries (4H/8H, 8H, 12H) per CIE 117.
While 4,000K is the preferred CCT for task-oriented office environments, it reads as clinical and cold in retail settings. Multiple design surveys and retail lighting studies consistently show that 3,000K is the strongly preferred CCT for most retail applications — it renders skin tones more naturally, makes textiles appear richer, and creates the warm, inviting atmosphere that encourages browsing and purchase behavior. The exception is grocery and fresh food retail, where 3,500–4,000K better renders produce freshness. For clothing, jewelry, and general merchandise retail — stay at 3,000K.
General ambient: 30–50 fc. Accent on merchandise displays: 100–200 fc. For luxury retail, the approach inverts — lower ambient (15–20 fc) creates dramatic contrast, with accent spots exceeding 300+ fc on key displays. The critical number is the accent-to-ambient ratio, not the absolute levels.
IES RP-2 (Recommended Practice for Retail Lighting) provides detailed illuminance targets by merchandise type and customer demographic. Higher light levels are recommended for spaces serving older customers, who require 2–3× more light than younger customers for equivalent visual acuity.
UGR (Unified Glare Rating) is the international standard metric for measuring discomfort glare in indoor lighting — defined by CIE 117-1995. It quantifies the psychological sensation of glare on a scale from 10 to 31 based on luminaire luminance, luminaire size, background luminance, and observer position.
Key thresholds per EN 12464-1:
• UGR < 16: Negligible perceived glare — suitable for drawing offices, technical drafting, and precision work
• UGR < 19: Comfortable for standard office work with computer screens
• UGR < 22: Acceptable for circulation areas, corridors, and short-duration tasks
• UGR ≥ 25: Unacceptable for any occupied indoor space — 55%+ of occupants report discomfort
Why it matters: UGR directly correlates with eye strain complaints, headache reports, and productivity measurements in office environments. A 2019 study of 1,200 office workers found that reducing UGR from 22 to 19 resulted in a 20% reduction in reported eye strain and a measurable improvement in reading comprehension scores on computer-based tasks.
Yes — strongly recommended. Retail lighting serves two distinct modes: daytime (bright, competitive with daylight through storefront windows) and evening (softer, warmer ambiance that encourages relaxed browsing). Dimmable lighting with scene control enables:
• Transitioning from 100% output during daytime hours to 60–70% in evening
• Creating spotlight scenes for events and product launches
• Reducing energy consumption during low-traffic hours by 30–40%
• Extending LED lifespan through reduced thermal load during low-demand periods
For retail, 0-10V dimming is the most cost-effective protocol — it's universally supported, simple to wire, and integrates with basic lighting control panels. DALI is preferred for larger stores with zoning requirements and integration with building management systems.
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