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Created September 8, 2002 |
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The Chicago Bar Project |
Guinness Gravity Bar
Guinness Storehouse
St James Gate
Dublin 8
+353 (1) 453-6700
Welcome
to the Crown Jewel of Ireland, the Guinness Brewery. Every day, hundreds of
faithful make the pilgrimage to where one of the world's favorite beers has been
brewed for almost three centuries. Following the recent migration from the
Guinness Hop Store to the Guinness Storehouse, visitors have even more reason to
come now that the Guinness Tour has become an architectural landmark. Perched at
the top of the Storehouse is one of the most unique and most popular bars in all
of Ireland: the Guinness Gravity Bar. Not only can you enjoy the best pint of
Guinness you'll ever have, but the Gravity Bar also offers an unparalleled 360º
view of Dublin and surrounding area. The crown jewel of the crown jewel, so to
speak. What a way to begin the new millennium.
The Makings of an Irish Empire
It all began in 1759, when Arthur Guinness signed a 9,000 year lease on a
run-down brewery for £100 that he inherited upon the passing of his godfather, the Archbishop of Cashel
four years earlier. The deal also included a copper, kieve, mill, two malt
houses, and stables for 12 horses and a loft for 200 tons of hay. Utilizing his
experience from a small brewery in Leixlip in County Kildare, Arthur Guinness
then built his beer empire by harnessing the popularity of a new type of beer,
called "stout," and by providing unprecedented benefits to his workers that
included wages 10-20% above the local average, guaranteed widow's pensions, paid
holidays, and free medical care. Today, 10 million glasses per day and almost
two billion pints per year of the “the world’s most celebrated pint” are
enjoyed by beer drinkers in 150 countries around the world. While tastes may
vary, Guinness is best enjoyed when served at 45º
Fahrenheit (6º Celsius), with three quarters of the pint glass being filled
initially,
then the remaining quarter after two minutes.
When money's tight
and hard to get
and your horse
is also ran.
When all you have
is a heap of debt
a pint of plain
is your only man.
– Flann O'Brien
"Pionta Guinness Led Thoil" – A Pint
of Guinness Please
In
December 2000, the $50M project to renovate the Storehouse, designed by
Robinson Keefe Devane/RKD Architects,
was completed as part of an overall effort to make the Guinness Brewery Tour, the
Gravity Bar and Guinness itself more appealing to younger generations of Irish.
This became necessary as Guinness sales in Ireland have been flat in recent
years with Budweiser, Heineken and Red Bull & vodka increasing in popularity.
For visitors, the Guinness Gravity Bar is accessible only if you take the
tour, which just happens to be one of the best deals in Ireland. For just
€11.50, you can experience for yourself the origin, history and making of the
world's most popular stout beer. Admittance to the Guinness tour can be found
through the front entrance of the Storehouse, a building that was originally
constructed in 1904 using architectural techniques that created many of
Chicago's skyscrapers.
Once you pay for the tour, you will receive a small plastic puck-like, Lucite
"pebble" that contains a drop of Guinness and a magnetic strip. As you wind your
way up the spiral route, around a six-story atrium that was purposefully
designed as a pint glass that would hold over 14 million pints of Guinness if it
were filled, you'll encounter dozens of interactive, well designed exhibits. One
of my favorites is where you can right a message and post it on a circular wall
for all future visitors to see. At the top of the atrium you'll encounter an elevator bank that
will shoot you up, literally through the top of the Storehouse, to the Gravity Bar.
As
you step out of the elevator, you'll find a circular hardwood, steel, stone, and
glass minimalist expanse. At the circular, stone-topped bar with its padded
metal barstools, one of several bartenders will swipe your puck, pull your
free pint and top it off by drawing a shamrock in the head. They'll then swipe
your puck so that you can't be a cheeky bastard by trying
to get an additional free pint (or the first of two free half-pints).
Non-Guinness enthusiasts take note: Guinness is the only beer you can get, so be
prepared and order a water, soda or give your Guinness to a companion. Once
you've received your pint, grab a seat in one of the blue lapis chairs around
a smattering of mirrored glass tables if you can. The Gravity Bar is usually very busy,
making it rather difficult to find a seat. Some even have to sit on the hardwood
floor after their long tour, which is not a big deal as the chairs would be more
comfortable if they were more than a foot off the floor and those waiting for a
seat didn't hover over you. Once you've had a chance to settle in, take in the view of
Dublin, beautiful Phoenix Park, the plethora of construction cranes thanks to
Ireland's Celtic Tiger economy, suburban Howth, and the Wicklow Mountains to the
south, all quite visible through the Gravity Bar's floor-to-ceiling windows. The
crowd consists primarily of tourist patrons (far too many from England and
Germany, although I'm sure that's what they say that about the Americans),
politicians making press conferences, award ceremonies, concerts, corporate
parties, fashion shows, gallery openings, and high-profile private events. One
such notable event was held on the March 16, 2001, when Paul Behan (who is
related to famous Irish novelist and playwright,
Brendan Behan) appeared on
London's Virgin Radio Breakfast show in an attempt to set the world record for
the fastest consumed pint of Guinness took place. Behan was successful by
downing his pint in 3.9 seconds, even though he claims his personal best to be
1.5 seconds.
While
many congratulate Guinness for the ultramodern look of the Gravity Bar and for creating an
unparalleled view of Dublin, the Gravity Bar's only weakness comes from its
form-over-function design philosophy. This same approach has led to the
demise of the Bailey, White Horse, the Morrison, and other notable Dublin bars.
While it is unlikely that attendance at the Gravity Bar will fall, considering
the universal appeal of Guinness and increasing tourist traffic, it's a shame
the bar isn't more comfortable and warm like the classic wood and carpeted bar
located in the basement of the old Guinness Hop Store. However, if it were,
people may linger far too long for anyone to be able to find a seat. That being
said, the Gravity Bar is sure to be the highlight of your trip to the Guinness
Brewery and easily offers one of the most impressive views of any pub in
Ireland, and is a far cry from the rather sterile pub located on the fifth floor
of the Storehouse. After all, 570,000 tourists per year can't be wrong.
As the metaphorical head on 14 million pints of Guinness, and highest point in Dublin, the Gravity Bar must be experienced – either as part of the Guinness Brewery Tour or, better yet, at one of the private events that take place in the evening (if you can get invited). While the lapis chairs may drive you crazy, the Guinness pacifies, the view distracts and the crowd entertains. For more information, check out the official Guinness website and enjoy. Go raibh maith agat (thank you) Arthur Guinness!
"When I did eventually get to the top
and Gravity Bar, I was exhausted and my head spun with all I'd seen. I sat back
waiting for my pint to settle and pondered the experience with as it said on one
of the flashing screens, a 'justifiable sense of pride', not so much regarding
Guinness but the Ireland it tries to represent. There was a time when we, in
Ireland couldn't have conceived of such a place. I know it's a brash marketing
exercise. It's not high culture and it's not even very interesting folk culture,
but I love the fact of its existence the wider confidence it signifies, the
unapologetic celebration of success.
"There is no finer place in Dublin City to sit back, survey the scene and think
about what it means to be Irish."
– Laura Mackey, 30th January 2002
~ Have a good story relating to this bar? E-mail it to me. ~
[back to the Irish Pub Project] [back to the Chicago Bar Project]
written by Sean Parnell
Accident at the Guinness Brewery
Brenda O'Malley is home as usual, making dinner, when Tim Finnegan arrives at
her door. "Brenda, may I come in?" he asks. "I've somethin' to tell ya."
"Of course you can come in, you're always welcome, Tim. But where's my husband?"
"That's what I'm here to be tellin' ya, Brenda. There was an accident down at the Guinness brewery..."
"Oh, God no!" cries Brenda. "Please don't tell me..."
"I must, Brenda. Your husband Seamus is dead and gone. I'm sorry."
Brenda reached a hand out to her side, found the arm of the rocking chair by the fireplace, pulled the chair to her and collapsed into it. She wept for many minutes. Finally she looked up at Tim. "How did it happen, Tim?"
"It was terrible, Brenda. He fell into a vat of Guinness Stout and drowned."
"Oh my dear Jesus! But you must tell me true, Tim. Did he at least go quickly?"
"Well, no Brenda... No."
"No?"
"Fact is, he got out three times to pee."
