The last construction news showed the concrete crew tearing out the brewery floor. Once that was complete, we laid out the plumbing trenches in the back of the building and then cut and excavated everything.
The good news in all of this is that I have no concerns about the floor cracking when hot and cold liquor tanks are placed on that rear slab. For Fat Bottom, that is a total of about 1,900 gallons, weighing more than 15,000 pounds...that's quite a load.
Sidebar for non-beer geeks: Hot and cold liquor tanks are for storage of hot and cold water. Quite a bit of energy goes into brewing, and we recover and store a lot of that as heat. Tap water is filtered and stored cold in one tank. At the end of the brewing cycle, it is run though a heat exchanger to cool boiling wort down very quickly. That water is now hot is stored for use in the next batch of beer.
Part II
For excavation, back fill and pouring the floor, a archway into the brewery was also opened up. This is an architectural detail in the original building that was just bricked up at some point in the past. Since we don't need this to be a doorway in the finished building, I'm not sure yet exactly what we are going to do with it. Ideally it will be a large picture window looking into the brewery, but we have to figure out the cost of doing that vs. some other options.
Lesson for the month: If you're building a brewery, don't make any assumptions about site conditions. I can now guarantee you'll be wrong about most of it.
Ben, I'm having a party tonight and would love to buy growlers/keg from you if you have it. Could you email me at, robert.bauchiero@gmail.com ?
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Great blog Ben...
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