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01 — STOA FINE CIGARS + SPIRITS

The Lighting Design Behind Houston's Most Exclusive Cigar Lounge

Houston, TX  ·  2024  ·  Loxone International Commercial Reference

Lighting Layers
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Architecture
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Control Brain
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Watch the room

Slowing down with a good cigar requires a room that knows how to slow down with you.

Stoa Fine Cigars + Spirits is a members-oriented lounge in Houston where the product is time. The lighting had to earn that reputation — atmospheric without artifice, refined without effort. Not a performance of luxury. Luxury itself.

02 / THE CHALLENGE

Exclusive without trying. Atmosphere doing the work.

The owner came to us with a precise ask: make the room feel like somewhere. Not a bar with good cigars. Not a fancy humidor. A destination — the kind of place that earns return visits through mood, not marketing.

The challenge with commercial hospitality lighting is avoiding the two failure modes: too dim to feel safe, too bright to feel intimate. Neither works for a cigar lounge. The answer isn't a compromise. It's layers.

"The brain reads the room as 'expensive' before you can say why. That's the job."

Daniel Lopez, Grizzly Tec

Stoa lounge — fireplace corner lit by warm architectural layers

03 / THE APPROACH

Five independent layers. Every channel dimmable. One Miniserver.

Warm-white Loxone RGBW throughout — no color tricks, no programmed theatrics. The color capability exists in reserve. The design decision was to never use it.

"Disciplined restraint is the most expensive thing you can put in a room."

01 / LIGHTING

The architecture of atmosphere.

Five independent layers, all warm-white, all independently dimmable. The room doesn't perform mood — it holds it.

Comparative lighting design analysis — flat lighting on the left vs layered design on the right, with a layer-by-layer breakdown below

Philosophy

Flat lighting fills a room. Layered design composes one. Each layer does a single job — ambient warmth, accent on art, glow on objects, navigation underfoot — and the moment they stack, the room stops feeling lit and starts feeling alive.

Stoa Fine Cigars + Spirits lounge — layered atmospheric lighting in full effect

Five layers.
One mood.
No visible light source.

04 / The lighting system

Five layers.
One mood.

Atmosphere is not a single fixture — it is five independent channels balanced against each other. Scroll to reveal each layer.

01

Cove

Continuous warm-white LED tape concealed inside the ceiling cove, running the full length of the room. Light hits the ceiling first and washes down — diffuse, sourceless, the ambient mood from which everything else departs.

02

Slab

A stone slab replaces what would normally be a window — and a single horizontal tape light at its base washes upward across the stone. The slab becomes a glowing feature wall. You see the stone lit, not the source.

03

Art Lights

Concealed ceiling fixtures aim warm beams directly at each artwork. You don't see the fixtures — you only see the art illuminated from above. In a room without windows, art lights replace the horizon.

04

Cabinet

Vertical LED tape concealed on both sides of the humidor and bar back. The light glows inward toward the cigars and bottles — invisible source, illuminated product. You notice the object, not the strip.

05

Downlights

Recessed and dimmed far below their rated output. Not there to illuminate — there to keep the cove from feeling hollow. Calibrated so a guest can read a label without squinting.

Scroll to reveal each layer

04½ / Try the lighting yourself

Toggle each layer on and off.
Feel what each one contributes.

Every layer is independently addressable. This is what Loxone control actually means — not a slider, but a complete architectural decision at your fingertips.

Drag each slider to dim · Tap a layer name to toggle

75%
55%
85%
70%
35%

01Cove

75%

Continuous warm-white LED tape concealed inside the ceiling cove, running the full length of the room. Light hits the ceiling first and washes down — diffuse, sourceless, the ambient mood from which everything else departs.

07 / SEE THE DIFFERENCE

Flat lighting vs. layered design.

Flat lighting
Layered Loxone
Stoa lounge — flat lighting simulation Stoa lounge — full layered Loxone atmosphere

Same room. Different lighting design.

"The brain reads the room as 'expensive' or 'moody' or 'designed' without being able to say why."

Restraint as luxury

Every fixture runs on the warm-white channel. The RGB capability of each RGBW unit is held in reserve — a deliberate choice. Color would cheapen the room. Restraint is what makes it feel expensive.

Contrast within low brightness

Running five layers at 8–15% each yields more depth than one layer at 60%. The eye needs variation to read space. The indirect cove at low percentage creates a ceiling that glows rather than a ceiling that illuminates.

08 / THE LAYOUT

Where each layer lives in the room.

Tap any hotspot to explore

BAR BACKHUMIDORENTRANCESEATINGTOP VIEW — NOT TO SCALEINDIRECT COVEDOWNLIGHTSART LIGHTSWINDOW LIGHTSCABINET LIGHTS

09 / THE HARDWARE

One Loxone Miniserver runs every dimming curve. Five layers, one brain, zero monthly fees.

02 / AUDIO

The sound that holds the room.

Audio at Stoa lives on a Loxone Audioserver, with separate zones for the lounge, the bar, and the patio. Each zone has its own preset volume and source — the bar plays jazz at a sociable level, the lounge sits at quiet ambient, the patio carries a livelier feel for the evening crowd. When the lighting scene shifts at 9 PM, the audio shifts with it: warmer presets, lower volumes near the seating, slightly elevated in the back zone. The room doesn't change — it transitions. We'll cover the full audio architecture in a follow-up case study.

02 / Audio system

One room, four zones, one feel.

SUBIN-CEILING SPEAKER (×4)SUBWOOFER (×1, corner)TOP VIEW · NOT TO SCALE
+ Show technical detail
Central media controller 1× Loxone Audioserver
Zone outputs 4× Loxone Stereo Extensions powering lounge · bar · patio · restroom
Speaker topology Wired in-wall and ceiling, hard-wired back to the rack
Sources per zone AirPlay · Spotify Connect · line-in · internet radio
Scene integration Audio shifts on the same Miniserver as lighting — single bus, no separate brain

03 / VENTILATION

Smoke handled invisibly.

The engineering problem of a cigar lounge is invisible to the guest — and that's the point. Stoa runs dedicated exhaust fans, makeup air supply, and controlled pressure differentials all orchestrated by Loxone. Occupancy-linked schedules ramp exhaust when the room fills, pull back when it empties, and maintain negative pressure relative to the entryway so smoke stays in the lounge, not the lobby. The Miniserver watches CO₂ levels and adjusts fan speed continuously. Guests smell cedar, not smoke. We'll detail the full ventilation design in the dedicated case study.

What we'll cover

Exhaust fan zoning + pressure differential design
Makeup air balancing
CO₂-linked fan speed control
Occupancy-based schedule ramp logic
Entryway smoke containment strategy
+ Show technical detail
Exhaust control Variable-speed extraction fans driven by Loxone 0-10V outputs
Makeup air Balanced via pressure-differential sensing — no negative-pressure backflow
Air quality trigger Smoke density sensor ramps exhaust automatically above threshold
Schedules Peak ventilation 7–11 PM · idle profile off-hours · presence-aware ramp
Integration Shared Miniserver with lighting + audio — scenes coordinate exhaust with occupancy

04 / PRESENCE

The room that knows you arrived.

Loxone presence sensors are placed throughout Stoa — at the entry, in each seating zone, and near the humidor. When a guest moves into a section of the room, scenes respond: lighting brightens slightly in that zone, ventilation adjusts, audio fades up a touch. When the lounge is empty for a defined period, the system pulls back into a low-energy standby — lights dim to 3%, fans throttle down, audio mutes. No manual switches. No staff intervention. The room manages itself, and it makes guests feel attended to without a staff member in sight. Full presence logic walkthrough coming soon.

What we'll cover

Presence sensor placement strategy
Zone-specific scene response logic
Empty-room standby automation
Occupancy-to-ventilation integration
Arrival scene triggering
+ Show technical detail
Sensors Loxone Tree presence detectors in every zone (lounge · bar · patio · restroom · office · storage)
Triggers Lights · audio · ventilation respond per zone as guests arrive
Energy logic Empty zones drop to setback automatically — no manual override needed
After-hours System enters energy-saving mode, only essential zones live
Integration Occupancy data shared across all 6 systems on the same Miniserver

05 / ACCESS

Membership, not just entry.

Stoa distinguishes between member entry, guest entry, and after-hours access — all managed through Loxone. The humidor is a separate controlled zone: members with a reserved cabinet have keyed-access via NFC credential. After-hours, the system runs a timed lockdown sequence that disarms specific entry points, locks the humidor zone, and sets a holding scene that looks attended-to from the street. Staff can override remotely via the Loxone app without being on site. Access credentials are time-bound and tied to Loxone schedules, not a separate system that needs its own management. Full access architecture coming in a dedicated case study.

What we'll cover

Member vs. guest entry credential tiers
Humidor zone NFC access control
After-hours lockdown sequence
Remote override via Loxone app
Time-bound schedule-linked credentials
+ Show technical detail
Hardware Loxone NFC Access Pure at member entry + locked humidor
Schedules Front door auto-locks at closing · members-only after hours
Guest workflow Doorbell intercom → staff notification, manual entry approval
Audit trail Every access event logged to the Miniserver
Integration Arming the security system requires the last person to scan out

06 / SECURITY

Protected without feeling protected.

High-value inventory — premium cigars, aged spirits, private-member humidor cabinets — demands a security layer that's invisible to the guest experience and unambiguous to any threat. Stoa runs monitored alarms integrated with Loxone presence, cameras on critical zones including the humidor and the bar back, and an after-hours trigger path routed through Southwest Dispatch. When motion is detected after lockdown, Loxone fires the alarm sequence, the camera system timestamps the event, and Southwest Dispatch receives the signal automatically. No manual call required. We'll document the full security integration in a dedicated case study.

What we'll cover

Monitored alarm integration with Loxone
Camera zones: humidor, bar back, entry
After-hours trigger + Southwest Dispatch path
Presence-linked alarm logic
Loxone alarm arming schedule automation
+ Show technical detail
Perimeter Wired door/window contacts · glass-break sensors on the storefront
Interior Motion sensors covering lounge · bar · office · storage
Cameras IP cameras + NVR — entry, lounge, bar back, exterior
Verification window 60-second silent check before full alarm — prevents false dispatch
Dispatch chain Southwest Dispatch (UL-listed central monitoring station) signals Texas DPS-certified police response
License Texas DPS Private Security License #B-29733501

05 / AT EVERY MOMENT OF THE DAY

Stoa Fine Cigars lounge — ambient scene
Scene video

"Happy hour, 7:00 PM. The room rises to meet the night."

06 / THE ROOM IN DETAIL

Every corner earns its place.

Stoa lounge — fireplace corner with layered warm-white lighting
Stoa lounge — screens and seating area
Stoa — humidor cabinet with warm under-lighting
Stoa Fine Cigars overall atmosphere

10 / FROM THE OWNER

Daniel and the Grizzly team built the room I imagined but couldn't describe.

— Stoa Fine Cigars + Spirits

Owner interview placeholder
Interview

Owner interview — coming soon

11 / Different moods, same hardware

One Miniserver.
Every scene imaginable.

Stoa runs a carefully chosen fixed scene. But the Loxone system underneath is capable of anything. Here's what the same room would feel like at different moments in the day.

Late Night Scene

Deep warm, very dim. All five layers running at 8–12%. The room becomes its own world. Nothing is visible that wasn't meant to be seen. This is the full design — the design as intended.

Brightness12%
Climate68°F
AudioVery low, ambient only
0% — off100% — max

Stoa runs a fixed scene. Loxone supports unlimited presets — the system is ready when the room evolves.

Want something like this?

Tell us about the space, the room, or the problem. We'll walk it with you and design the system around how you actually live — or host.

Featured on Loxone International's commercial reference list — view on loxone.com →

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