Fascinating Concept: Leasing a Nanobrewery
By far the biggest barrier to the aspiring brewer is cost. Buildings and equipment can quickly tot up to the seven figures. Thus did emerge the gypsy and nano
brewer, folk who figured out a way to bring small amounts of beer to the
market without the massive up-front cost. But even nano systems aren't cheap--and the goal of any serious brewer is to dump the incredibly labor-intensive nano system as soon as she can raise funding for a bigger one. The answer? Lease a nano.
I'm not really sure how much more beer Portland can absorb, but the company is willing to ship it anywhere on the west coast, Idaho, or Nevada. It'll be interesting to see whether ideas like this have a future.
It's a fascinating idea. Even though the total cost for the year lease isn't nuthin ($15k), you'd be brewing with a far smaller initial investment. Even if the whole thing was a debacle--the beer didn't turn out like you'd hoped, selling the beer was harder than you expected, and you found that brewing is hard, repetitive, sweaty work--you probably wouldn't lose your house in the process.You want to start your brewery now. You know you'll only be a nano-brewery for 1 to 2 years. You want to reserve your capital for purchasing your future "big" brewery. Lease costs can be expensed in the current tax year and not depreciated over time.* Save your capital and Lease A Nano!Minimum one-year lease. $1,275 per month. Proof of insurance required.
I'm not really sure how much more beer Portland can absorb, but the company is willing to ship it anywhere on the west coast, Idaho, or Nevada. It'll be interesting to see whether ideas like this have a future.