When I see pictures of huge arched entryways with lights dangling twenty feet off the floor (and ten+ from the ceiling), I immediately wonder how on earth they'll change the bulbs when they burn out.
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There are tools for that specific use. But what happens when your wiring is buried behind three inches of poured concrete and it burns out?
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The architect would probably tell you that it's run through embedded conduits and the mounts for the lights are replaceable (or at least I'd hope that's the case), but I wouldn't trust that myself over the long term. Sooner or later something will go too far wrong there.
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At work we sometimes run network cables through conduits and walls, and usually it works out. But we have a certain amount of broken embedded cables, broken jacks that can't be fixed, and so on. And old cable types that aren't useful any more, too.
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It's basically a shed and they let the view do literally all of the work.
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anyone else here not a fan of overhead lighting in general?
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I much prefer lamps. Lots of lamps at lower wattage so I can change the lighting to fit whatever we're doing. Overhead lighting only in the kitchen/dining room.
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yeah, exactly
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. Banned in Sweden. SubGenius, Zhuangist, white-hat troll. Defrocked mathematician. Brain problems.