Categories: Lighting

8 Lighting Ideas for Open Plan Living Areas

Open plan layouts are popular for good reason, but lighting them well takes more thought than a single ceiling fitting can offer. Without internal walls to break up the space, a flat overhead glow leaves the room feeling functional rather than welcoming. Zoning the light is what gives open plan kitchens, dining areas and lounges their atmosphere after dark. Here are eight ideas that work in real UK homes, from new build extensions to converted warehouses.

1. Define Zones With Pendant Clusters

Group two or three pendants over the dining table to mark the eating area without putting up walls. Hung between 75cm and 90cm above the table top, they create an obvious sense of place and anchor the surrounding chairs. Matching the metal of the pendants to your handles or tap finish keeps the look intentional.

2. A Statement Light Over the Island

Kitchen islands act as the working heart of most open plan spaces. A linear pendant or a row of three smaller fittings runs neatly along the length, throwing focused light onto the worktop. Aim for dimmable LEDs so the same lights can serve breakfast and a late evening drink without feeling identical.

3. Recessed Spotlights as a Background Layer

Avoid the temptation to grid the ceiling in spotlights. Instead, use spotlights as a background layer that fills in the gaps between feature lighting. Plan them around traffic paths, worktops and any seating areas where reading might happen, rather than spacing them evenly across the whole ceiling.

4. Floor Lamps to Soften the Lounge End

The lounge zone in an open plan room needs lighting that reads as softer and lower. A tall arched floor lamp beside a sofa, or a tripod base in a corner, brings the eye down from the ceiling and signals a change in mood. Position the bulb so it is hidden by the shade from your usual seat to avoid glare.

5. Wall Lights to Break Up Long Walls

Long, uninterrupted walls in open plan extensions can feel flat after dark. A pair of wall lights at roughly 1.6 metres from the floor adds rhythm and a sense of scale. Uplighters work well against textured plaster or panelling, while downward facing fittings highlight artwork.

6. Under Cabinet Strip Lighting

Strip lighting tucked under wall cabinets does two jobs at once. It lights the worktop for cooking and, when used alone in the evening, provides a soft glow that reads as ambient rather than task. Choose a warm white strip at around 3000K so the kitchen does not feel clinical when the main lights are off.

7. A Sculptural Pendant in the Stair Void

Where a double height ceiling or staircase sits within the open plan area, a longer sculptural pendant fills the vertical space beautifully. Cascading designs, oversized lanterns and ribbed glass globes all suit this position. Make sure the lowest point of the fitting still leaves head clearance on any landing or walkway.

8. Layered Lamps Across Furniture

Finish the scheme with table lamps placed on consoles, sideboards and the occasional side table within the lounge area. Layering this final tier of light is what separates a finished room from a half done one. Browse the wider lighting selection at Furniture in Fashion for matching pieces that suit different zones without clashing.

Planning the Switching

One forgotten detail in many open plan rooms is the switching layout. Each zone deserves its own circuit so you can light the dining table without flooding the lounge, or run only the lamps for a quiet evening. Where possible, fit dimmer switches on every circuit. Smart bulbs and app controlled systems can retrofit dimming into existing wiring without major rework.

Colour Temperature Across Zones

Keep the colour temperature consistent across the open plan area. A mix of 2700K in the lounge and 4000K in the kitchen will read as two unrelated rooms once it gets dark. A warm tone of 2700K to 3000K throughout, with brighter task lighting layered in at the worktop, keeps the space feeling unified.

How the Furniture Helps

Lighting alone cannot zone a room without help from the furniture beneath it. A rug under the sofa, a clear circulation path around the dining table and a console behind the sofa all reinforce the zones the lighting sets up. Match your living room furniture in tone and material across the space, but vary the heights so each zone has its own profile.

FAQ

How many lights do I need in an open plan room?

Plan for three layers: ambient (ceiling spots or pendants), task (over the island and dining table) and accent (lamps and wall lights). The number of fittings depends on the floor area, but most open plan rooms need at least five separate fittings.

Should the lights match across zones?

Lights do not need to match exactly, but they should share at least one element such as metal finish or shade colour so the room feels connected.

What is the right height for a pendant over a dining table?

Between 75cm and 90cm from the table top to the bottom of the pendant is the most comfortable range for UK ceiling heights.

Can spotlights be the only ceiling lighting?

They can, but the result often feels flat. Adding pendants, wall lights and lamps makes the room far more inviting after dark.

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