Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

$68M malt house is world’s largest

State, city incentives helped business expand in Minnesota

- NATALIE DAHER STAR TRIBUNE

MINNEAPOLI­S — The world’s largest single-site malting facility is now operating outside the Twin Cities, though its owners could have processed barley into beer ingredient­s elsewhere.

This fall, Rahr Corp., a family-owned company that employs 240 in the metro area, opened a new $68 million malt house, which processed its first batch of grain earlier this month. As craft beer saturates the beverage industry, an on-site “research brewery” will open by spring so that small brewers can test new products using sophistica­ted equipment from Germany.

Rahr’s latest expansion, located in the suburban town of Shakopee, depended on state and local tax increment financing and is part of Shakopee’s subsidizat­ion of other big-name newcomers, Amazon and Shutterfly, with the idea to create more jobs and build its industrial tax base. Rahr, which was originally Rahr Malting, moved to Shakopee from Manitowoc, Wis., in 1936. It also has operations in North Dakota, Washington and Canada, shipping malt primarily throughout North America but also to clients overseas.

“Rahr is truly our oldest company here in Shakopee,” said Samantha Di Maggio, the city’s economic developmen­t coordinato­r. “If you can’t help the company that’s helped everyone in town, then you’re really failing, in my mind.”

The complex now in--

cludes six malt houses, a 20,000-square-foot research brewery and technical center, and an 80,000-square-foot distributi­on and packaging hub. Rahr provides malt for about 90 percent of Minnesota’s breweries as well as mainstream breweries such as Anheuser-Busch.

“They’re a little bit like Willy Wonka,” DiMaggio said. “You see it, but you don’t know what goes on in the inside.”

The local touches are evident from facility design down to packaging. Local constructi­on companies and engineers helped build the new malt house, and Rahr bought parts from companies in the state.

Before shipping bags of malt, employees add a salted nut roll from Pearson’s, another Minnesota company.

“If you’re going to build a malt house today, you look at European or German design — or the Chinese design,” said Jesse Theis, chief operating officer of Rahr Corp.

But the company looked instead to its own neighbors.

Passers-by may see steam rising from the newest 115,000-square-foot malt house. Inside, employees process barley — mostly grown in Minnesota, North Dakota, Idaho, Montana and Alberta — into malt in three stages.

“The closer we are to this plant, the better,” said Ronald Johnson, president of Rahr Malting. “But we believe in geographic diversity.”

First, they immerse barley in a steeping process. Then, it germinates for four days. Last, the malt is dried out for use by distilleri­es, brewers and even food suppliers such as Miller Milling Co.

The newest malt house is vertical rather than horizontal because of the site’s limited footprint, said Chief Executive Officer and President William Rahr. Rahr decided to stay local because of the company’s history and employees, who earn a “family-sustaining wage,” he said.

“The two projects would have done better someplace else, competitiv­ely,” Rahr added. “But this is homegrown.”

 ?? Star Tribune/RENEE JONES SCHNEIDER ?? William Rahr, chief executive at Rahr Corp., examines a steeper at the company’s new $68 million malt house in Shakopee, Minn.
Star Tribune/RENEE JONES SCHNEIDER William Rahr, chief executive at Rahr Corp., examines a steeper at the company’s new $68 million malt house in Shakopee, Minn.

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