I'm putting out 14,400 Lumens per shelf but a lot of that goes other places than the plants. Tomorrow I pick up 100 feet of mylar I ordered to help that somewhat. An XML LED mounted on an aluminim U channel will easily put out 500 Lm without getting very hot You can get them up to 1500 Lm each but they get very hot and both their efficiency and lifespan is less. For flashlights a lot of people feel that 1000 Lm is a good compromise. A dimmer would be useful to get the optimum balance in your particular set up. The LedEngin LZ4-40R200 will put out light at 670 nm at operating temperature which encourages the growth of chloroplasts. Plus the LEDs are much more directional so 14,400 Lm of omnidirectional fluorescents will probably be equaled by less than 10,000 Lm LEDs.
I'm guessing alternating 6500K, 4500K and 2700K XM-Ls 4-6" apart depending on how much current you're going to feed them, 1 bar on either side with 1 bar above, alternating which LED starts off is good. The LedEngin LEDs will have to be on separate bars, one on each side. Or wired separately if put on the same bar as the XMLs. You'd need about 9 - 18 XM-Ls to get 9,000 Lms, 6 on each bar using a 30" bar that's 5" between the LEDs (2.5" at each end) should work well. For your greenhouse you might want to do 8' bars with similar spacing. LEDs have to be further away from the plants than fluorescents because their operating temp is about 200 degrees F. Now that high temp exists only in the space of about 1/25 sq" but you still can't put a 10W LED 4" away as you can with a fluorescent.
LEDs have to be wired in series with a constant current driver (power supply). Only identical LED types can be on the same circuit.