The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cigar smoker’s paradise: Aficionado­s delight in Cigar City Club

Laid-back ambiance and friendline­ss of patrons also attract some non-smokers.

- By Haisten Willis

For Cox Newspapers

Good conversati­on accompanie­d by a quality cigar and a nice glass of bourbon or scotch has long been the perfect combinatio­n for Julius Bolton. His father and grandfathe­r loved a good stogie and passed that appreciati­on on to Bolton, owner of Cigar City Club in Sandy Springs.

“We’re all ex-Army guys,” Bolton says. “It was just a way of life when I would see my father and grandfathe­r smoke.”

He opened his semi-private cigar bar in 2015. In brainstorm­ing its appeal, Bolton, also a U.S. Army veteran, decided to create an upscale lounge that would cater to patrons in a special way. He started with a large mahogany bar and soft golden lighting as a welcoming main attraction. Plush sofas and chairs surround it. A 180-squarefoot walk-in humidor is close by with 230 cigar selections.

“A lot of people have never been to a private club and don’t know what it’s like,” Bolton says. “I decided to open up that kind of atmosphere.”

He offers a membership J.D. Baker, left, of Douglasvil­le, and J.T. Smith, of California, smoke cigars and listen to live music on the patio at Cigar City Club.

that provides discounts on cigars and food, as well as access to the members-only space at the front of the club.

“I call it a cigar lounge on steroids,” Bolton says, describing the entire place.

Posters on the wall honor heroes and cigar lovers of the past, including Winston Churchill and the 1960s Rat Pack: Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford and Joey Bishop.

Bolton says he wanted a place that he could visualize giants like Churchill, General George S. Patton and his

father and grandfathe­r, themselves lifetime Army men, sitting down and smoking their favorite cigars.

His personal desire for a particular type of cigar varies with the hour of the day and mood he’s in. “That’s the thing about cigars. Like wine, different people have different tastes for them,” he says.

Jimmy Martin Jr., a frequent patron, smokes cigars only a few times per month but enjoys Cigar City Club’s ambiance and his camaraderi­e with the over-40 crowd that stops in after work and on

weekends.

“They have a patio right in the front of the lounge,” says Martin, a Marietta resident and owner of JMJ and Associates private investigat­ion firm. “People go out there that are serious cigar smokers. They have speakers out there so you can hear the music.”

Jazz or old school R&B is performed most nights.

In food, Bolton’s happy hour includes small plates of coconut shrimp, crispy grouper, cheeses and other items, as well as $6 cocktails and wine. The dinner menu has glazed lamb chops, lobster tails and more prepared by a Le Cordon Bleu-trained chef.

The lounge draws non-smokers, too, such as Brandi Lewis, who operates an Alpharetta based ancillary services company “The patrons and the vibe here are sophistica­ted,” she says. “You never know who you will might meet.”

To honor Cigar City Club members and some of the public figures who often visit, Bolton started a lifetime achievemen­t award last year. The private event celebrated entertaine­r Freddie Cole, who was the first person to play the lounge’s baby grand piano. The event included live music, top-shelf liquor and compliment­ary cuisine.

This year, NBA great Julius Irving is the honoree.

Along with private membership perks, Bolton says Cigar City Club has a little bit of everything. “We’re little bit of live music, cigar shop, and we’re a lot in the way of a lounge,” he says.

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