Your biggest challenge for an office enclosure is size. A red foot needs some space. An outdoor garden is best with indoor enclosures used for cold seasonal weather.
I am approaching this from an engineering point of view on humidity, heat, and lighting.
Most tortoise pyramiding is caused by persistent low humidity. The outer layer of a tortoise shell is protein, similar to human hair and fingernails. Apparently, proper growth desires higher levels of...
Pyramiding is primally caused by low humidity where the shell is consistently too dry. The proper humidity is species dependent. Keep in mind that humans prefer much lower humidity than tortoises. For indoor enclosures balancing the proper humidity for tortoise and human habitats becomes and...
As others posted, they are fine. Incandescent bulbs only provide heat and visible light, and the split is more heat than light. In this case they provide almost 65 Watts of heat plus white light. The needed heat depends on the size of the enclosure, the species, and the ambient room...
I recommend to set the thermostat to control the low temperature with a dark blue night incandescent or a ceramic heater. Place the temperature probe in the cool side. Place the basking lamp and UV lamp on th warm side over the basking spot and control them with a timer for 12 hours ON, 12...
Here is my two cents on this.
I don't agree with a one size fits all approach to lighting. Lighting and heating depend on the enclosure, lamp hardware, species, and diet. A full thorough answers needs details on everything, and on top of that, the conditions can change over the course of...