Game day deserves better than the living room. The thermostat is somehow a committee decision, someone wants to put on a show at halftime, and the couch faces the fireplace instead of the TV because the room had to work for normal life. It holds together until kickoff. Then every compromise in the house shows up at once. A real game day setup needs its own space, its own screen, and a door you can close.
Why a Bay Beats the Basement
A basement man cave sounds good until you start living with the tradeoffs. You’re still under the house, which means footsteps overhead, kids coming down for snacks, and a setup that has to share the room with storage bins and the holiday decorations that never made it to the garage.
A private bay gives you the room without turning your house into a renovation project. You can bring in furniture that actually fits the crew, mount the screen where it belongs, and leave it all in place when the game is over. Nobody folds chairs back into a closet. Nobody moves the poker table because someone needs the treadmill. The best part is the simplest one: the setup stays up, so Sunday looks the same next Sunday.
The Essentials Checklist
TV and Mounting
The 85 inch is the floor, not the ceiling. Mount it for seated viewing, because nobody watches the fourth quarter with a tape measure.
Seating
Recliners or a sectional that fits the crew. Keep bar stools off to the side near the snacks, not in the main viewing line.
Fridge or Kegerator
A mini fridge is the minimum. A kegerator can work if the space and Bluffdale rules allow it, so confirm that before you buy the tap hardware.
Sound System
A soundbar is the baseline. Step up to a receiver and satellite speakers if the space warrants it, and keep the volume smart.
Lighting
Dimmable overhead lighting or LED strips behind the TV. A little backlight keeps the room from turning into a cave in the bad way.
Gaming Setup
Put a console on the main TV, or add a second monitor for its own zone. Halftime moves faster with a controller in someone’s hand.
Decor and Team Merch
Jerseys, pennants, neon signs, signed helmets, framed ticket stubs. The stuff that looks crowded in a spare bedroom and perfect in a dedicated space, and the whole point is that it stays up all year.
Bonus Upgrades
Golf Simulator
The dream add on, and the one that needs the most checking. A full swing needs real ceiling clearance. Before you buy a net, mat, projector, or launch monitor, talk to the Bluffdale team about ceiling height and whether the space can support the setup.
Poker Table
A folding table works for flexibility, a permanent one if you know what this room is becoming. Either way it turns the space into more than a football room, and gives you a reason to use it on Friday night and through the dead stretch of the calendar.
Dart Board
Sounds small until you do it right. A real cabinet, good lighting, a clean throw line, and enough room behind the player make it feel like part of the room. Grade level entry helps when you’re hauling in the cabinet and the backer board.
You don’t need every upgrade on day one. Start with the essentials, then add the thing your group will actually use. The best man cave isn’t the one with the most stuff. It’s the one where nobody wants to leave after the late game ends.
A Setup Guide
WorkBay Mancave
Viewing zone, bar, pool table, and a high top, with the floor still open and the door clear. One bay holds the whole setup.
Viewing Zone
Big screen, sectional, and recliners facing the wall.
Bar
Counter, stools, and cold storage along the wall.
Game Tables
Pool table and a high top with room to move.
Open Floor
Room left over and the bay door still clear.
Want to Build Yours?
WorkBay Bluffdale has spaces available. Tour one, see the square footage, and talk to the team about how you want to set it up, including anything that needs approval before you bring it in.


