Layered, not just overhead
Downlights alone flatten a room. We combine general, task and feature lighting so spaces have depth, day or night.
Renovations, new builds and existing homes — indoors, outdoors and everything in between. We plan the lighting around how each room is actually used, then install it properly.
Downlights alone flatten a room. We combine general, task and feature lighting so spaces have depth, day or night.
We work directly with your builder or from your plans, wiring for the lighting layout before walls and ceilings close up.
Decks, gardens, pathways and building lines — weatherproof fittings rated for where they're actually going.
From simple dimmers to app-controlled scenes — matched to fittings and drivers that actually dim smoothly.
Kitchen islands, dining tables and hallways — the fittings that make a house look designed, not just lit.
Adding circuits for a new lighting plan means checking your switchboard can actually handle it — we confirm this upfront, not after.
As early as possible — ideally at the electrical rough-in stage, before walls and ceilings are closed up. Planning the lighting layout early avoids costly rework later.
Yes — we regularly work from architect and builder plans, and coordinate directly with the site so lighting is wired in at the right stage without holding up the build.
Yes — outdoor fittings need a weatherproof IP rating suited to their exposure, whether that's under an eave or fully exposed to rain. We select the right rating for each fitting's actual position.
In most cases, yes. We assess your existing wiring and switches first to recommend a smart system that will actually work with what's there, rather than something that looks good on paper.
We walk through the home (or your plans) room by room, then provide a single itemised quote — so you can see exactly what you're paying for and adjust scope if needed.
Staged is completely fine — plenty of clients start with one or two rooms and come back for the rest later. We just plan the wiring with the bigger picture in mind, so later stages fit in cleanly instead of undoing earlier work.