Jeramey Jannene
Friday Photos

Milwaukee Brewing Rises in Pabst Footprint

Beer shipping facility becoming beer brewing facility.

By - Mar 2nd, 2018 07:11 pm
Construction of The Forty Two. Photo by Jeramey Jannene.

Construction of The Forty Two. Photo by Jeramey Jannene.

A bland warehouse on the edge of downtown is being transformed into a hub of activity.

The building was originally known as Building 42 and was the last building the Pabst Brewing Company built on their 14-block campus. Pabst shuttered the campus abruptly in 1996, just 20 years after building the new distribution center. It has been vacant ever since.

The redeveloped building will be known as The Forty Two.

The 170,000 square-foot building, located at 1131 N. 8th St., will house a new brewery for Milwaukee Brewing Company, allowing it to more than double in capacity. Their operations won’t be limited just to making beer. There will be plenty of beer served as well. A tasting room is planned for the space inside the brewery, leveraging the massive new windows. A bar, Raise, is planned for the rooftop of the building. And while a second-story view might not sound so impressive, the building is built into a hill and has incredible views of Downtown to the east, including the new arena. I suspect it will become a tradition for some to sneak a brewery tour in before attending a Milwaukee Bucks or Marquette Golden Eagles game.

Above the brewery developer Scott Lurie and his firm F Street Group intend to create 50,000 square-feet of office space, known as The Factory, and an event venue, known as Okasion, that will have a view of the brewery.

A restaurant, known as the Craft Haus, will tie the whole place together.

Lurie’s firm sold the lower level of the building, which houses the self-storage units, to Highland Development Ventures in October 2016 for $3 million. There are now 1,000 self-storage units in the space operated by Extra Space Storage.

That work is highly transparent currently because the construction firm, using designs by Rinka Chung Architecture, is replacing formerly brick walls with massive glass windows.

The project is slated to open in the first half of 2018. The brewery expects to employ 22 full-time and 25 part-time employees at the facility.

In 2010 Aeronautics considered moving to the building, but those plans never advanced.

Milwaukee Brewing has been eyeing the site for years, and was finally able to put together a deal to make the whole project work. The brewery is leasing the space from Lurie’s firm F Street Partners, which acquired the building in August 2016 for $2.5 million. Lurie’s firm acquired the property from an affiliate of Zilber Ltd., which purchased the entire complex in 2006.

The company held a ceremonial groundbreaking for the new brewery in late July. We last covered the project in September 2017, when the building was effectively transparent.

Milwaukee Brewing will not close its 15,000 square-foot Walker’s Point brewery, which as of 2016 was operating at capacity. A company press release notes the Walker’s Point facility will be used “as a pilot brewery, and to expand its award-winning barrel-aged beer program and sour beer production.”

The new facility will initially have the capacity to brew up to 30,000 barrels a year. State records indicate the brewery produced just under 12,000 barrels in 2016.

The brewery will be the second in the large complex known as The Brewery. The Pabst Brewing Co. opened a small brewery in a former Pabst-owned building on April 14th.

The project is just one of many in the neighborhood, including a new hotel, two new apartment buildings, new park and now a film hub.

Photos

Renderings

Pre-Construction Photos

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