Dayton Daily News

TOXIC BREW CLOSER TO LARGER BREWERY IN DAYTON

- By Mark Fisher Staff Writer Contact this reporter at 937-2257355 or email Mark.Fisher@coxinc. com.

It’s been a long time coming, but Toxic Brew Co. founder Shane Juhl believes it will be worth the wait.

More than two years after the project was first announced, Juhl and his brewery have overcome a potentiall­y deal-killing regulatory obstacle and are now moving ahead with plans to build a production brewery and taproom along the Great Miami River north of downtown Dayton.

The Dayton Environmen­tal Advisory Board, which helps the city protect water quality of the Dayton’s rivers and reviews developmen­t proposals that could impact the city’s well fields, voted last week to approve Toxic Brew’s revised plans, according to both Juhl and Kathy Arnett, a member of the environmen­tal advisory board.

The vote was unanimous, Arnett confirmed.

While there are still other regulatory approvals Juhl must navigate before constructi­on can begin, the environmen­tal advisory board’s approval was a crucial step that will allow the brewery owner to move ahead with the project.

“We’ll start the process early next year, and hope to break ground next summer,” Juhl told this news outlet.

The new production brewery will increase Toxic Brew’s brewing capacity fourfold. Its taproom will feature a view of the Great Miami River, and could host special events such as weddings and occasional festivals, Juhl said.

The 4.3-acre tract that Juhl purchased in 2016 is at the end of Janney Road north of Stanley Avenue and west of Troy Street on the east side of the Great Miami River.

The view of the west riverbank includes a railroad trestle and the Great Miami River bike/ recreation trail.

Toxic Brew’s current brewery and taproom at 431 E. Fifth St. in Dayton’s Oregon Historic District will remain open and ultimately will shift its focus to brewing exclusivel­y sour and farmhouse-style ales, Juhl said.

Plans for the new brewery will include secondary containmen­t measures to guard against spills that could affect the river or well fields and will incorporat­e other safety and handling measures, Juhl said.

The Toxic Brew project represents yet another example of a remarkable craft-brewing renaissanc­e that has occurred throughout the Dayton area over the last seven years.

More than a dozen breweries have opened in the Miami Valley, which had zero local craft breweries at the beginning of this decade.

Dayton Beer Co. and Lock 27 are among those local breweries that have built much larger facilities than their original locations, and Eudora Brewing Co. in Kettering is in the process of doing the same.

Yellow Springs Brewery and Warped Wing Brewing Co., among others, purchased or leased space to help accommodat­e canning, bottling and retail sales.

 ?? MARK FISHER / STAFF ?? Toxic Brewing Co. founder Shane Juhl stands atop a levee above the Great Miami River in Old North Dayton, where he will build a production brewery and taproom.
MARK FISHER / STAFF Toxic Brewing Co. founder Shane Juhl stands atop a levee above the Great Miami River in Old North Dayton, where he will build a production brewery and taproom.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States