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Posted

do you have room for an outbuilding? A garage. It would be easier, more effective, and overall a better option to turn it into a year round cigar room. 

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Posted

What are your thoughts on intake/exhausting the smoke.  Is there a window?  How would you run the ducting?  I just installed 10" ducting for hood for my range. 

Vapor barrier the area, duct, intake, and system to capture-move the smoke.  Are there local resellers of the smoke extractors you are considering?  Just sheer moving the air in the room that has a vapor barrier will get you there.  Ozone for short stint once you leave the room as an option.

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Posted

Smoking rooms in the basement are tough because obviously smoke rises. It requires a lot of sealing and insulation of the ceiling to ensure the smell doesn’t permeate. Can be done if that’s your only option but it’s involved.

Posted
42 minutes ago, Hammer Smokin' said:

do you have room for an outbuilding? A garage. It would be easier, more effective, and overall a better option to turn it into a year round cigar room. 

Following this... been debating converting half of my garage. The outer wall has a window that the room would enclose, and I'd take the further half from the door leading into the house. No part of the living space is over the garage. I have a rabbitair waiting to use for whatever space I designate. 

For building ideas that don't account for smoke moving:
I liked this guy who converted his garage to office - and didn't seem like he knew more than I did!



And I liked this guy because he had really practical advice for saving cuts/reducing effort - converting the garage to a bedroom

 

Posted
9 hours ago, Hammer Smokin' said:

do you have room for an outbuilding? A garage. It would be easier, more effective, and overall a better option to turn it into a year round cigar room. 

I have a two car garage but three cars. Have used the garage in the past during winter but would prefer not having to do that anymore. 

 

8 hours ago, BrightonCorgi said:

What are your thoughts on intake/exhausting the smoke.  Is there a window?  How would you run the ducting?  I just installed 10" ducting for hood for my range. 

Vapor barrier the area, duct, intake, and system to capture-move the smoke.  Are there local resellers of the smoke extractors you are considering?  Just sheer moving the air in the room that has a vapor barrier will get you there.  Ozone for short stint once you leave the room as an option.

There are windows in the basement. My preference is to have someone that knows what there doing to figure it all out and do it for me. It’s a blank slate so I would think they could do whatever is required. 

 

8 hours ago, MrBirdman said:

Smoking rooms in the basement are tough because obviously smoke rises. It requires a lot of sealing and insulation of the ceiling to ensure the smell doesn’t permeate. Can be done if that’s your only option but it’s involved.

Agree with smoke rising it would be important to have it done right. 

Posted

There are HVAC companies involved in restaurant construction -- air handling in kitchens with flame grills, lots of smoke, airborne grease, odor.  Might be an option to look into.

  • Like 4
Posted
5 minutes ago, Puros Y Vino said:
  • Positive pressure is your friend.  If this will be a room inside a basement, you want the air supply in that basement to be pushing air into that room as much as possible. Having that positive pressure will keep the smoke/stank in the room when you open to door get something, or someone enters, etc.  If you remember Tom's lounge. His lounge room door would be pushed shut by the outside pressure. And sometimes, the blower helps with that too if it's strong.

I think you mean negative pressure for the cigar room itself

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Posted
22 minutes ago, traveller said:

I think you mean negative pressure for the cigar room itself

Yes. Positive pressure outside that room.

Posted

Gary,why don't you contact Tom.He have had a smokingroom done in his basement

  • Like 1
Posted

I also have a three car garage that I converted to a two car garage. I use my space predominately as a woodworking shop and have it filled with equipment tools finishes and a few work areas. With that said I also have a 220 electric heater that is very effective and a window unit to cool on hot days. 
I didn’t know much about residential construction but for me it was a matter of studding a wall, hanging a door, insulating and finishing. There are products you can get to apply insulated foil foam foil to insulate the garage door as well. 
with a garage you will have better options to create a seal/airflow in your direction of choice. Depending on how you finish the space you also might be adding value to the house as a workshop/heated storage. 
may .02 but it’s hard to control air inside a house. Garage would be my option. Finish the interior as you like. As long as it stays dry you are fine. 
with my wife, it wouldn’t matter what I did in terms of hvac, airflow or hermetically sealing the room, if I smoke in the house I’ll hear some squawking 

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Posted
11 hours ago, Rhinoww said:

I also have a three car garage that I converted to a two car garage. I use my space predominately as a woodworking shop and have it filled with equipment tools finishes and a few work areas. With that said I also have a 220 electric heater that is very effective and a window unit to cool on hot days. 
I didn’t know much about residential construction but for me it was a matter of studding a wall, hanging a door, insulating and finishing. There are products you can get to apply insulated foil foam foil to insulate the garage door as well. 
with a garage you will have better options to create a seal/airflow in your direction of choice. Depending on how you finish the space you also might be adding value to the house as a workshop/heated storage. 
may .02 but it’s hard to control air inside a house. Garage would be my option. Finish the interior as you like. As long as it stays dry you are fine. 
with my wife, it wouldn’t matter what I did in terms of hvac, airflow or hermetically sealing the room, if I smoke in the house I’ll hear some squawking 

I wish I had a three car garage but I have three cars and a two car garage so in the past I set up part of it as a smoking area but can’t permanently section part off. 

 

11 hours ago, Squarehead said:

Gary,why don't you contact Tom.He have had a smoking room done in his basement

Thanks Hans. I may do that but posted up here to see if there was anyone in the GTA with someone that did it for them that they were happy with. 

 

Other option I am considering is closing in our porch which is a decent size. It would have screened windows so I could crack one open have them put in a fan to extract the smoke and a heater of some sort on the ceiling. May be easier than doing a room in the basement but may not be as enjoyable. 

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