Workshop layout ideas?

Ah yes, the backs and sides of cabinets are useful for tools too. I have half my files on the side of a Bisley filing cabinet below the pillar drill and next to the vice. They live on a magnetic strip. I expected that to cause problems when filing steel, but it doesn't seem to.

@FletchFFletch: I figured they were probably LED fluorescents. I assume you know not to use both isolation transformers at once? I favour the library style arrangement of storage cabinets because you don't need much standing room between facing storage and it's amazing how much room you can sometimes need at a workbench. My workshop is very badly laid out and inefficient to use, but the main bench has half a ton of machine tools on it, so rotating it to allow all the machine tools to be in library style rows and give quick access would/will be an enormous job of work. Trouble is, it evolved, rather than being planned. I started with just one small lathe, mill, and drill. Then a beautiful BCA3 jig borer was spotted, then a Colchester Bantam mkI lathe, then a bigger and better bandsaw, likewise pillar drill, etc, etc. I keep thinking I'd like a Hardinge lathe but I can now (with serious concentration) machine to <6um on the Bantam, and a Hardinge is seriously expensive.
 
Years ago, some military surplus shipping containers were advertised fitted out as a mobile workshops. They included a barely used Harrison M300 lathe, pillar drill, cabinets etc. They had excellent security compared to a shed, but no windows and I figured SWMBO would object to such a thing in the back garden, even though it was camouflaged. It even had air filtering (good for hay fever) and was a bargain. I really regret not buying one.