Orland Park spans nearly a century of residential development — from the late-1800s cottages and Craftsman homes of the Old Orland Historic District to the spacious two-stories of Crystal Tree and Silo Ridge built in the 1980s and 1990s. Chicago Ceiling Lights installs LED recessed lighting in all of them. Our licensed electricians know how these homes are built and how to route wiring cleanly through finished walls and ceilings without turning a lighting project into a renovation.
Orland Park incorporated in 1892 around a small commercial district along the old railroad corridor — the stretch now recognized as the Old Orland Historic District, designated by the Village in 1986. That core includes 16 contributing structures with Folk Victorian, Commercial Italianate, Craftsman, and Tudor Revival architecture. Walk down that block today and you're looking at buildings that predate World War I. It's the original heart of the village, and it represents a small but important slice of Orland Park's older housing stock.
The bulk of Orland Park's residential growth came in waves: modest ranch and split-level homes in the 1960s and 1970s across areas like Silver Lake and Orland on the Green; then larger planned subdivisions in the 1980s and 1990s — Crystal Tree (1987–1996), Silo Ridge (established 1985), and Bunratty Estates among them — with the two-story layouts, great rooms, and vaulted ceilings that were popular in that era. The Preserves of Marley Creek and other developments near 179th Street represent the early-2000s build-out. Today, the village is home to roughly 58,700 residents and continues adding development around the downtown triangle near 143rd Street and LaGrange Road.
That range of construction eras matters to a lighting installer. The approach for a 1970s ranch with a low flat ceiling differs from the approach for a 1992 two-story with a cathedral great room or a 2003 home with an open-joist basement waiting to be finished. We've worked in all of these, and we quote each one based on what's actually there.
Orland Park's housing spans multiple construction eras, and each generation of homes has its own lighting considerations. Here's what shapes the installation process in this community:
These homes typically have 8-foot ceilings, drywall or early drywall-over-plaster construction, and straightforward attic access above main living areas. Recessed lighting retrofits here are generally clean and efficient. Some homes from this era have original knob-and-tube wiring that needs to be assessed before adding new circuits — we check for this during quoting.
Homes built in this wave are largely drywall construction with standard 8- to 9-foot ceilings in most rooms — ideal for recessed lighting. Many also feature great rooms or living areas with vaulted or cathedral ceilings that reach 12 feet or higher. These spaces can still take recessed lighting beautifully, but slope-rated fixtures and adjustable trims are required, and the quote reflects the added complexity. This is also the era when finished basements with drop-tile ceilings became popular — easy to retrofit without cutting into drywall at all.
Newer homes are almost exclusively drywall with open-joist basements that are either finished or waiting to be. Ceilings are typically standard height, and new-work boxes are easy to install before drywall goes up — though we do retrofit work in these homes just as often. These are generally the most straightforward installations we do.
The original commercial and residential core of the village — the area designated as a historic district in 1986 — contains homes and buildings with architectural character not found elsewhere in Orland Park. Some structures here have plaster-and-lathe ceilings rather than modern drywall. Plaster installations require a different cutting approach and more careful patching; they're quoted individually. We've worked in these older buildings and know what to expect.
Complete recessed lighting solutions sized to Orland Park's housing stock:
We install recessed lighting throughout Orland Park's neighborhoods and subdivisions, including:
Not sure if we cover your street? Call or fill out the form — we serve all of Orland Park's 22 square miles.
Our pricing in Orland Park is $500 for the first light in a room and $200 for each additional light. That includes LED fixtures, dimmer switches, 3-way and rocker switches as needed, all wiring, and patching and basic painting when we cut into drywall. A typical kitchen with 6–8 lights runs $1,500–$1,900. Projects covering 3 or more rooms receive 10% off. Non-standard conditions — ceilings over 9 feet, plaster or lathe walls, smart-switch upgrades, or splitting one space into multiple switch zones — may require an adjusted quote. We'll confirm everything in a free on-site or phone consultation.
Yes, though homes in the Old Orland Historic District — which dates to the late 1800s and early 1900s and includes Folk Victorian, Craftsman, and Tudor Revival structures — sometimes have plaster-and-lathe ceilings rather than modern drywall. Plaster work requires a different approach and may add time and cost compared to standard drywall installations. We assess each home individually and give you an accurate quote before any work begins.
For general-purpose basement lighting, we typically plan one fixture per 20–25 square feet of floor area. A 600-square-foot finished basement would need roughly 12–15 lights for even coverage. Most Orland Park basements we work in have standard drywall or drop-tile ceilings installed during finishing, which keeps the project straightforward. Open-joist unfinished basements can be wired and finished in one visit.
Yes. Vaulted and cathedral ceilings are a common feature in Orland Park's 1980s and 1990s construction — subdivisions like Crystal Tree and Silo Ridge frequently include them. We use slope-rated fixtures with adjustable trim so the beam stays directed straight down rather than toward the wall. These are quoted case-by-case because ceiling height and pitch affect the time required.
Most retrofit recessed lighting installations — replacing existing fixtures or adding lights to finished rooms — are permit-exempt in the Village of Orland Park. If you want a permit, or if your project involves new circuits that your municipality requires to be permitted, we can handle the application and inspection scheduling for an additional fee. We'll advise you on what's required for your specific project.
A single room — say, a kitchen or living room — typically takes 4–6 hours. Whole-home projects covering multiple rooms usually wrap up in one full day. Larger basement finishing jobs, or homes with complex routing around finished walls, may take 1–2 days. We'll give you a realistic timeline when we quote your project.
In addition to Orland Park, we provide recessed lighting installation in:
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