Gravely Brewing is shaking it up. Here’s the text.
A New Gravely is Brewing! It’s official, later this summer we will be moving from our beloved Baxter Avenue taproom to a new 10,000 sq. ft. space on Main Street in Nulu. Our new location will feature our award-winning craft beers in a new, open-concept space with LOTS of natural light, an expansive patio and a more seamless customer experience. And yes, we’re bringing Eliana’s Honduran Cafe with us!
Before you ask – It’s NOT good-bye to our Baxter Avenue taproom. After we make the move to Main Street, we will keep brewing and begin our plans to repurpose the property into something better, that’s also very Gravely
Our new address is 901 E. Main Street at the northwest corner of Main Street and Campbell. Stay tuned for more details and make plans to visit us on Baxter before we make the move later this summer.
A minor point, but something that someone always notices: strictly speaking, the new Gravely location falls on the Butchertown side of the line, with NuLu across the street.
We received an information release, reprinted here in its entirety.
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GRAVELY BREWING CO RELOCATING TAPROOM TO NULU
(LOUISVILLE, KY)- Gravely Brewing, the most-award winning brewery in Kentucky, is relocating their Baxter Avenue taproom to NULU late summer of this year. The new location will be located at 905 East Main Street, and the property is part of a 10,000 square foot, multi-million dollar redevelopment effort spanning 901 and 905 E Main St, located at the northeast corner of Main Street and Campbell in the heart of NULU.
The building was recently acquired by Redbird Commercial Real Estate Group, a local investment firm led by Jon Grell and Nick Schweitzer. Realm Construction is serving as the general contractor on the project with the deal brokered by Clay Hunt of CBRE.
Gravely Brewing, a live music brewery, opened in 2017, and the vibrant taproom has been a community staple for eight years. The new space will include loads of character, natural light, a more seamless customer experience as well as food from Eliana’s Honduran Cafe currently served at Baxter. Ryan De Remer from Sweatshop Studio, a design collective based in Brooklyn that conceived Gravely’s initial wall of sound...Read more