Steps for planning and building a cigar room
The next stage in the process was framing up the entire basement. Obviously if you are converting an existing room into a cigar room this won’t be necessary. Although I have to say this made my life a lot easier since it was a piece of cake to run ducting, electrical, speaker wire, etc., when the dry wall wasn’t in the way. We did the majority of work for the project in between the framing stage and the dry wall stage.
We spent a good week on mounting the exhaust fan and running the ducting. Since the ducting isn’t flexible (I know they make flexible ducting, but it wouldn’t have worked for this application) we had to do a lot of duct cutting and connecting to get it to go where we needed it. I had to have a few pieces of the duct work specialty made since not all of the parts we needed were available prefabricated.
It’s important to make sure you have a back draft damper on the exhaust fan hood and a screen on the fresh air intake hood that go to the outside of the house. Both of these will help prevent things from the outside such as rain and insects from getting in the ducting.
After the dry wall was in place we put the overhead vent grille in and cut away and installed the registers for the HVAC and fresh air intake. The HVAC register was a standard 10″x6″. The fresh air intake register was slightly larger, 14″x6″, since it’s ducting was 8″ round.
The next step was sealing the room to make sure smoke never leaves to any other part of the house. We installed the cigar room window and door. We then put a flexible door jam beneath the door and installed a weather guard all around the door way. Since the rest of the room from top to bottom was heavily insulated and the the walls and ceilings had no exit points for smoke, the room was pretty well sealed. The end result is you can smoke all day long in the room and never detect even the slightest bit of odor anywhere else in the house. I’ve been told the cigar room is wife proof, even though I don’t have a wife to yell at me.
After all of this was done we installed the hardwood flooring and did minor touch-ups for the project. The hardwood flooring (or tile) is a must in my opinion because it doesn’t retain the odor of smoke and is very easy to clean if you accidentally ash anywhere.
I had a blast doing the project. If you run into any questions, please don’t hesitate to contact me and ask something. There are lots of photos available in the photo gallery.