WarmBeer
Unhappy camper
D'oh!Development Application would be my guess, different names in different States. Planning Approval in Tas.
Thanks, need coffee.
D'oh!Development Application would be my guess, different names in different States. Planning Approval in Tas.
Interesting insights, thanks Merc.One of the biggest problems to creating your own brewery - although it only applies if you want to be a brew pub eatery - is council. They do not understand what a brew pub is, what it does, how it can benefit the community on many level - employment/tourism etc I would like to create a brew pub resturant like they have in the States and Canada. I would like it to be in the main street amongst the shope, cafes, resturant and bakeries so that people shopping, doing their banking or poping off the news agents to buy their lotto ticket can pop in for a hand crafted ale and maybe a burger or some tapas. Locals could come down for a liesurely lunch with business clients or Mum, Dad and the kids could drop by for dinner or just mum and dad for a drink and some nibbles for a bit of time out.
Anyway you get he picture but council dont. You see if you take grain and turn it into beer it is called manufactering and you cannot manufacture in a commercial zone you can only do that in an industrial zone. Mind you if you take grain and make bread then that is not considered manufacturing and you are allowed to set up your bakery in the main street - there are three in my local main street but no brew pub. So if you want to have a brewery with a bar and maybe serve up some type of good food then you have to set up in an industrial area next door to a panel beater and an earth moving hire company and hope that people once they have bought their bread down in the main street will jump in the car and drive out of twon to your place for a beer and some tapas. That is if the council will allow you to open on the given day someone decides to drive over to your place.
Doesnt make sense does it? They will stay in town and go to a resturant that makes (manufactures) their own pizza dough, tops it with some lovely locally made (manufactured) ingredients, cook it in their wood fired oven and serve it with a locally made imported and oxidised pilsner.
Setting up a brewery that predominantly makes and packages bottled beer seems to be working for some people and yes is really hard work and being allowed to open two days a week allows them to make some cream but why must they be hiden away in an industrial estate and why cant they be open seven dats a week if they choose. Why cant we be loud and proud in the main street offering a unique product along with great food and great service?
After all turning grain into beer really is a process of cooking just like what the bakery and the resturants do.
Okay off my soap box.....well almost... having a location in a commercial environment actually means that all the hard work might actually pay off as well as give boutique hand crafted beer the sort of profile it should be given.
On the topic of starting a brewery I would be interested in the following info sources:
Where do you get data on how much beer is produced, who produces it etc.
# of large and small breweries by state.
What are the major industry barriers, like getting taps/distribution
Should you sell your own product or get a distributor.
I looking for the industry/business data on operating a brewery and selling beer.
I can't find much info, especially that shows data that includes craft beer.
There is a bit in the US but not much and nothing on Australia.
This is a must read if you are thinking about starting anything.
http://www.brewsnews.com.au/2010/08/the-ec...obrewing-redux/
Considered enrolling in a brewing course at university? I think, hypothetically if I was gonna make the venture I'd probably want to start out by learning how to brew on a professional level. You would probably learn about the business end of things, though someone who's done this would be a better source for information.
everyone in this industry is so helpfull its not funny.
seriously tho think with your head "do i really want to start a brewery" as opposed to thinking with your heart "love brewing really want to open a brewery".
You need money and a shedload of it unless you have someone on your side who is a fabricator and can make your system from scratch.
Plan - you need a business plan, brewery plan, site plans, christ you need a plan just to plan all those plans.
Marketing - Logo's, labels, box's, six pack's, websites, designers
Sourcing Equipment - Chinese brewery? Buy a defunct brewey? Build your own? Equipment does not come cheap, you have to source it all then have somewhere to put it.
Property - better find a big factory to house your brewery, dont forget you will be paying rent (dead) money whilst setting about (about 6-12 months), hows that shedload of cash looking?
Government / Council - ABN's, registering business, Excise License, Liquor License, Police checks, Coucil approval, food safety and so much more.
Calibration - Gotta have all those tanks calibrated in Litres before you can use em.
Stress - got grey hairs yet? cause you will soon. I've done alot of "big" things in my life but setting up a brewery is by far the biggest stress - knowing that you have to get beer out that door just to pay rent and assoc costs is mind numbing. More sleepless nights than i care to remember.
What i have listed above is only half of it. We at Kooinda are very lucky in the sense that we were able to break into the market from our residential brewery where we paid no rent. Also we have FIVE guys who are so passionate about their craft that we all do this OUTSIDE our normal jobs.
Happy to discuss anything with anyone in person it just all gets a bit to much to type.
That is an awesome post mate!! Wheres the clapping icon when you need it?
have a couple kooi icon's instead :drinks: :kooi:
marketing is a 24/7 job!!!!!
A marketing degree would be more handy if you were the primary investor.
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