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Craft brewers ride momentum into the lucrative Chicago market

Brewing tank outside The Schlafly Tap Room in downtown St. Louis.
Wayne Pratt|St. Louis Public Radio

The increasingly competitive craft beer sector has at least two high-profile St. Louis companies looking to make inroads in Chicago, one of the largest markets in North America.

Urban Chestnut and Schlafly recently struck separate distribution deals to start selling in Chicago, which the Brewers Association says is the third largest overall beer market in the country.

“Certainly, there is a lot of competitiveness. But I think one reason we see interest in a place like Chicago is that there's still a lot of opportunities for growth,” said Bart Watson, the association’s chief economist.

Schlafly Finally Hits Windy City

Schlafly already had a presence in the New York City and Washington, D.C. metro areas and could use that experience to make even more of an impression on Chicago beer drinkers.

“We learned a lot about ourselves. We grew in confidence. We learned that we actually make some really good beer,” said Dan Kopman, a co-founder of Schlafly.

He recently shifted from chief executive officer to co-chair of parent company The Saint Louis Brewery.

The move into Chicago represented a change of plans. Schlafly wanted to open a brew pub in the city, but Kopman said state regulations put that project on the shelf.

"In the process of talking to consumers and retailers and other interested stakeholders in Chicago, it became clear to me that the time was now right for us to start to sell Schlafly beer in Chicago.”

It is a natural fit for Schlafly. The company’s growth plan, set in 2005, established distribution boundaries at 300 miles around St. Louis, but Chicago was not part of an initial push.

“We didn’t feel that level of confidence that you need to take on a market like Chicago and to do it right,” said Kopman.

After the Chicago deal was struck, Schlafly reached distribution agreements for Cincinnati and Dayton, Ohio, and Nebraska is on the radar.

Overall, the company pumped out around 60,000 barrels of beer last year and is searching for property for another production facility, which would be the Schalfly’s third in the St. Louis region.

Urban Chestnut Arrives in Chicago

Another prominent craft brewer in St. Louis produced roughly 30,000 barrels last year at its operation in the Grove and started Chicago distribution a few weeks ago.

Beer storage at the Urban Chestnut Grove Brewery and Bierhall in St. Louis.
Credit Wayne Pratt|St. Louis Public Radio
Beer storage at the Urban Chestnut Grove Brewery and Bierhall in St. Louis.

“Chicago being Chicago and the size that it is, we are jumping over a few markets to get there. But it's certainly, from a craft beer perspective and from a branding perspective it's a very, very interesting market,” said Urban Chestnut co-founder David Wolfe.

A key aspect of the deal is a distribution partnership with Chicago-based Lakeshore Beverage, which has strong ties to the St. Louis beer industry.

“They are an Anheuser-Busch wholesaler. That's made good sense for us. We actually currently partner with an Anheuser-Busch wholesaler in St. Louis called Grey Eagle. What really we found works well for us in that partnership is that with Anheuser-Busch wholesalers you find that they really blanket the market,” said Wolfe, who used to work for the Budweiser producer.

Chicago followed market expansions throughout Missouri, including Jefferson City, Columbia and Kansas City.

One of the company’s biggest distribution concerns was moving into an area where brand recognition is non-existent.

“That's primarily because we don't have the resources that big brewers have to promote our name in the avenues and the media that big brewers do,” said Wolfe.

Beer Equals Big Bucks

Traditionally, beer has been a lucrative business and the craft sector continues to pick up steam.

The national Brewers Association says craft brewers created more than 360,000 jobs in 2012, while pumping nearly $35 billion into the U.S economy.

Beer glass
Credit Brewers Association|brewersassociation.org

“Some of the growth we see today is buoyed by overall market growth and people are trying to take on new markets while they still have an opportunity to because I think the competitiveness is only going to increase in the future,” said Watson.

European Potential

Even with untapped potential in the U.S., Urban Chestnut is reaching beyond North America.

It recently acquired a small operation in Germany that should be producing beer later this year.

“You can almost think of Germany and Europe in general as being 25 to 30 years behind the U.S. craft beer market. So, with this acquisition we are really getting ourselves into an emerging market at an early period of time,” said Wolfe.

He added the Bavarian purchase is the realization of a dream for the company, since Urban Chestnut co-founder Florian Kuplent is from that part of Europe.

Bürgerbräu Wolnzach, a small brewery located in the town of Wolnzach, Hallertau
Credit Urban Chestnut|http://urbanchestnut.com
Urban Chestnut recently acquired Bürgerbräu Wolnzach, a small brewery located in the town of Wolnzach, Hallertau in the Bavarian region of Germany.

But Wolfe stressed it also fits into an overall business strategy.

“Which is going to allow us to do something we'd already been doing over there. That's export some beers there, but sell more of the Urban Chestnut beers there and actually producers Urban Chestnut beers in Germany and sell them in Germany and Europe as well.”

Wayne is the morning newscaster at St. Louis Public Radio.