I have a 16,200 sq ft industrial warehouse that I want re-imagined as a mix of storage bays and small trade workspaces suited to electricians, plumbers, third-party logistics teams and similar users. The goal is to carve the floor plate into flexible units ranging from roughly 500 sq ft up to 2,500 sq ft, then present the concept visually so prospective tenants can picture themselves in the building. Key physical constraints: we have about 12 ft of clear height; interior partitions should stop at roughly 8 ft, each bay receiving a 4–8 ft-wide door for easy movement of tools and pallets. I’d also like shared amenities—restrooms, a modest break room and a cluster of rentable office cubes or rooms—integrated into the plan without sacrificing too much leasable area. Here is what I need from you: • Optimised floor-plan showing all unit sizes, circulation aisles, shared amenity blocks and loading access. • At least one high-quality 3D render (SketchUp, Revit, or comparable) that I can forward to potential tenants; additional vantage points welcome if they help tell the story. • Source files for both the CAD layout and the render, so my contractor can fine-tune wall types and MEP later. I’m open to suggestions on partition systems, corridor widths and any code considerations you feel are critical. If you have experience fitting out light-industrial or maker-space projects, I’d value any insights that make the layout more marketable. Let me know your typical turnaround time and how many revisions you include—I’m keen to move quickly once we lock in the concept.