flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Family business brews up a unique building

Sponsored Content Steel Buildings

Family business brews up a unique building

Winter Construction is part of the Star family, and their new 8300 sf brewery and tasting room is a Star Building System.


By Star Building Systems | May 4, 2016

Winter Construction in Freeport, Illinois, is family owned and operated. Mark Winter, president, is the third generation to work at the company, his son Scott continues as the in-house architect, his sister-in-law is CFO, and other family members participate on a part-time basis. Recently, the Winters started another family business, Generations Brewing Company, where Mark’s other son, Steven, is the brewmaster. Mark says that one of the benefits of working with family is that you can totally trust your people. Perhaps that's why, when they were ready to build their brewery and tasting room, they decided to ‘keep it in the family’ in terms of construction, too. Winter Construction is part of the Star family, and their new 8300 sf facility is a Star Building System.

According to the architect, Scott Winter, AIA LEED AP, the building’s style is “Agricultural meets Industrial.” The cross-sectional shape that it presents to the world “recalls a barn with a lean-to off to one side, something people often used to do. We were trying to make this building as unique as possible within a tight budget, so we knew Star was a good choice for the job.”

This off-center barn shape is echoed in the massive hops-frame that marks the end of the beer garden area in front of the brewery. The frame is made of salvaged rafters from a local armory.  “The hops-frame speaks to the heavy beams of a barn,” explains Scott Winter, “but for brewing, of course, we wanted to have a steel-frame structure.”

The “industrial” aspect of the design is seen in the skin that Winter used to clad this agricultural shape. The roof is Double-Lok standing seam metal roof with a Galvalume Plus finish.  Siding is a mixture of AVP (used vertically) with exposed fasteners and a siliconized polyester finish and PBC with a Galvalume Plus finish. “Galvanized steel is a traditional agricultural material. We like that. We used that on the interior walls in some locations, as well.”

“We were able to fast-track design,” recalls company president Mark Winter. “Because the engineering was complete, we were able to begin pouring the foundation before the design was fully approved. We were able to complete interior design while we were already constructing.” He also points out that the time of year when they started, in January, would have prohibited constructing a masonry building. “We would have had to wait two to three months,” he says.

The 60-foot clear-span interior is divided into two main areas, a 6550 sf brewery, and a 1750 sf tasting room. The mezzanine runs through both spaces. In the brewery, the mezzanine is used for storage, and the area under it houses the mill used to crack the grain.

The interior design is full of hints of the Agricultural/Industrial theme: tasting room tables with bases made of black iron pipe, an iron-pipe chandelier, and light fixtures made from metal grain buckets. The large sliding door in front is made from salvaged barn siding.

Construction was completed in May 2014. Brewing equipment was installed, connected, and operational by October, and they had their first beer in the second week of November.

“It’s instantly become one of the hottest places in town to go,” continues Winter. “Something with a little edge, something different. Craft beer is just exploding, even in small towns like Freeport.  They say they only drink light beer, but they come in and try ‘Pretzel City Amber,’ and they’re amazed. That’s our flagship beer.” Their other ten varieties include ‘Live Free Porter,’ ‘Hella Good Lager,’ and ‘No Call, No Show,’ a 10% alcohol beer that, Mark Winter says, was named because “that’s what you do the next day at work: no call, no show.”

Just 15 months after opening, they already have about 100 accounts—restaurant, bars, supermarkets, etc.—in a four-county area, in addition to their own tasting-room/beer garden customers. The brewery grounds include 23 acres, currently tilled for growing corn and hay, but in the long term, they intend to grow their own hops on the property, keeping it in the family.

 

Related Stories

| May 14, 2012

Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture design Seoul’s Dancing Dragons

Supertall two-tower complex located in Seoul’s Yongsan International Business District.

| May 7, 2012

2012 BUILDING TEAM AWARDS: Fort Belvoir Community Hospital

A new military hospital invokes evidence-based design to create a LEED-certified facility for the nation’s soldiers and their families.

| May 3, 2012

2012 BUILDING TEAM AWARDS: Rush University Medical Center

This fully integrated Building Team opted for a multi-prime contracting strategy to keep construction going on Chicago’s Rush University Medical Center, despite the economic meltdown.

| Apr 23, 2012

Thornton Tomasetti project wins AISC Merit Award

Thornton Tomasetti provided structural design services through construction administration to architect HOK for the 1.6-million-sf tower and tiara structure, which comprises 15 steel tube arches spanning approximately 158 feet horizontally and 130 feet vertically from the top of the main building roof.

| Apr 17, 2012

FMI report examines federal construction trends

Given the rapid transformations occurring in the federal construction sector, FMI examines the key forces accelerating these changes, as well as their effect on the industry.

| Mar 26, 2012

McCarthy tops off Math and Science Building at San Diego Mesa College

Designed by Architects | Delawie Wilkes Rodrigues Barker, the new San Diego Mesa College Math and Science Building will provide new educational space for students pursuing degree and certificate programs in biology, chemistry, physical sciences and mathematics.

| Mar 14, 2012

Hearing to decide fate of unfinished Harmon in Las Vegas under way

The testimony began with CityCenter consulting engineer Chukwuma Ekwueme methodically showing photo after photo of parts of the Harmon, where he and his team had chipped away the concrete pillars and beams to examine the steel reinforcing bars inside.

| Mar 6, 2012

Gensler and Skender complete new corporate headquarters for JMC Steel in Chicago

Construction was completed by Skender in just 12 weeks.

| Feb 20, 2012

All Steel names Breagy director of metro New York

Breagy is responsible for overseeing this region’s sales team while strategically coordinating the sales efforts of Allsteel dealers and representatives in the tri-state area.

| Feb 10, 2012

LAX Central Utility Plant project tops out

Construction workers placed the final structural steel beam atop the Plant, which was designed with strict seismic criteria to help protect the facility and airport utilities during an earthquake.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021