Methods For Creating An Extraction Room?

Labconco offers equipment for extraction stages, including explosion-proof floor-mounted fume hoods. They help businesses find the right equipment and answer questions about their processes. To reduce energy consumption in cleanrooms, consider minimizing cleanroom size, avoiding overspecification of contamination classes, and installing low-pressure exhaust systems. When choosing an extraction lab or building one, it is crucial to know if you need a Class 1, Division 1 (C1D1) or C1D2 room. Proper planning is essential for ventilation, including the correct size, type, and number of vents.

Extraction and amplification rooms should be built in a linear fashion with features like pass-through cabinetry and interlock doors to minimize cross-contamination risks. The temperature of the extraction facility should be 65 degrees. To design an extraction facility, consider the overall size and shape of the space, building codes, and fire codes. If the space needs to be negatively pressured, the roof height should be at least 8 feet, but 2 or 3 feet taller if using a pallet jack or fork lift.

Physically, plan all flows and consider furnishings such as ventilation direction, clean to dirty, cool to hot, and floor drains. Consider the extraction license, property and buildout, professional extraction team and training, safety room, and extraction equipment. Consider the room layout, whether it’s in a straight line or a U-shaped room, and minimize excess movements back and forth for the extractor.

Understanding different methods of cannabis extraction is vital for designing a cannabis testing lab design for the extraction process. By considering factors such as ventilation, space size, building codes, and fire codes, businesses can ensure safety and efficiency in their extraction facilities.


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Methods For Creating An Extraction Room
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Rafaela Priori Gutler

Hi, I’m Rafaela Priori Gutler, a passionate interior designer and DIY enthusiast. I love transforming spaces into beautiful, functional havens through creative decor and practical advice. Whether it’s a small DIY project or a full home makeover, I’m here to share my tips, tricks, and inspiration to help you design the space of your dreams. Let’s make your home as unique as you are!

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11 comments

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  • I’ve been looking at building a shed to extract in as the 3x2m utility room is a bit on the wee side 😂 I’m going through the building regs and was wondering how you got round the waste water stuff? My understanding is we really don’t want to put wax down the normal drains. Do you collect it somewhere?

  • I spent many years extracting honey in a dilapidated shed with a hot knife and a hobbyist’s extractor – no running water, no heat/AC and no way to keep bees out. I then strained and bottled in my kitchen. What an enormous waste of time and effort!! I finally got to a point of all-in or all-out with beekeeping – either I invest in a proper honey house and equipment like yours or I get out, altogether. I chose the latter. Congratulations on your fantastic honey house and spectacular collection of equipment!! Thanks for creating and sharing another great article!!

  • Hi Laurence, Great article thanks. Question: What would you suggest the minimum distance from bees to a honey room? I have very limited space. Thinking of splitting the apiary with a high net fence – bees on one side and shed for extracting, jarring and candles on the other. I would be interested to hear your thoughts buzz. Is it crazy to even consider close proximity to the bees?!

  • I have mostly national supers but recently bought commercial supers as they are easier assembled and hold more honey in one lift compared to national, so I am nearly half and half now. All deeps national BTW. I hope to expand more and more every year and will probably need an uncapper at some point. How big was your operation when you got the uncapper? and is there ones out there that would take commercial and national? I seen a chain uncapper that I think might work. Would love to hear your valued opinion

  • Hi Lawrence, very professional setup you’ve got for yourself there mate, looks like you have payed for the very best yes lyson is top notch and well made none of the plastic equipment you see on some sites, If I was 30 years younger and had a lot of your get up and go we could be in competition with each other but alas I’m a lot older and I’m happy with my 17 hives and my second hand honey spinner I’ve converted to take a drill instead of hand cranking. Thank you Lawrence for all your hard work and dedication you have for your subscribers and all the good work you do with your bees.

  • Would a small 600x600mmx1650mm high tent work with a filter and ext fan up top of tent, and re-routed to bottom of tent, with a small exhale bag hanging low. kind of like a closed loop circuit. so there would be no in take of fresh air (other then when I open tent to water). But there is a small oscillating fan running. Temp of tent is controlled via the room temp. Thanks

  • Wow, I have been looking and looking and your vid is one of the first I have come across that explains this so well. Thank you! What would you consider good for venting 2 4×4’s and my only concern is odor control since the smells make him nauseous. I am currently using a vivosun 6″ fan but my tent is a bubble lol. I know it pulls plenty of air into this from via the tent, from the rest of my house because you can feel the air that rushes in from under the door (2 ” crack at bottom for air exchange).

  • I don’t have a “grow room” but last year I grew a few plants, very successfully for my own use, in my 10 X10 basement room completely sealed off to everything except the entry door to access the room, no windows no vents, etc, all concrete. I had an LED grow light, a dehumidifier and a box fan with a charcoal filter mated to it for odor control and another box fan for air circulation. The only time I would go in was when I watered. Grow light was remote controlled. It was surprisingly simple although I had some fights with soil gnats and some powdery mildew but the end product was excellent. The only fail was odor control, especially during flowering. I’m trying to decide if a stand alone fan and filter(similar to what people use in a grow tent) would work vs a reasonably sized(???) ozone generator. The ozone generator is tempting. On the other hand, I might be able to create negative pressure with a fan/filter. Any advice would be appreciated.

  • To anyone starting out, we all know funds can be tight BUT……….. never ever try save money on your extraction!. Cheaper filters in my opinion are not very good at all, always try save money elsewhere to go for a better brand extraction filter. At the end of the day it’s for YOUR safety and you risk everything by trying to save afew quid. BTW the carbo air filters in this vid are 👌👌, these will last you a sold 2/3 years

  • I was wondering how could this set up be as it looks like a closed system with no relation to the room itsel. It looks like it sucks the air from outside and move through itself and then back out. I would think. there should be two separate set up. One blowing air into the room. And another completely different set up at the other side of the room blowing air out. What I like to see exactly the part that the air actually enters the room, not the part that is outside the room, that is obvious. Then I like to see the part that the air from the room enters and is pushed out, not the part that is outside the room. You can’t have the blowing in and blowing out next to each other.. I don’t get it.

  • Nice article. What is proper ventilation for a 5×5 tent grow with a 730W LED in a room with 10,000 BTU window AC? The house has central air. Half the window AC will be routed into the tent for a constant supply of cool air. Should I exhaust the tent out the window, in another part of the house, or in the same room ? 2 in-line fans, one for intake, one for exhaust or just one for exhaust that’ll pull air into the tent too ? Thank you!

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