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HausBrauerei_Harvey

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In the summer of 2016 I built an 8x16 enclosed exterior porch on my place, intending to eventually turn it into a brew room. I've done a bit here and there between other big projects but am now focused on getting brewing in this room this summer. I'm proud that I've done everything outside of the concrete work for this project myself. A few photos of my project are below. I'll update as I make progress towards the finish of this project over the next few months.

this is how things looked after my first day of construction
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Getting up some of the walls.
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I love this photo of me and my son (3 at the time) after a long day of framing I just crashed here and he came to chill next to me.
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Almost framed in.
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Room is finished on the exterior fall 2016
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I did the electric fall 2016
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I did an offset off the wall where i'll do tile for brewing to allow heat to better escape
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After hanging the drywall I was able to close out my permit which was great, I also did a big deck and roof cover over the deck that summer. Where the backerboard is will be a tile wall.
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I did the drywall finishing winter 2018
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Now this spring I put in the vents for my exhausts, i'm running natural gas.
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A few more photos to bring this up to date to how things stand today:

I have my stands welded, a dual burner stand for boiling split batches, and a single stand for my HLT
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In April this spring I did the cool wood accent wall with reclaimed wood from my place (old redwood decking) as well as some old barnwood.
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I made my exhaust hoods from some 55 gallon drums just a few weeks ago. You can also see the cabinet i'm building to serve as a stand for my HLT as well as my coleman extreme cooler mash tun.
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The wood plank ceramic tile flooring was finished last week.

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I worked on the subway tile on the walls this weekend, just finished it Monday night. Now I just need to grout it, doing a darker grey grout.
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So thats how things stand for the moment, once the walls are grouted I can move my cabinet back in, work on finishing that in place, there is now some more trim wood work that can get done in the room now that the tile work is done. I am then going to do an epoxy pour with some coasters on that long shelf under the wood accent wall. I'll update with photos as I make more progress this summer and get closer to brewing in here.
 
A bit of progress to update: The wall grout is now done, so I was able to put my rough-framed cabinet back in and my hoods. With the cabinet in place I was able to trim out the shelf that is going to be poured epoxy below the wood accent wall this weekend. I'm heading on vacation for a few weeks now but plan to finish up the epoxy shelf when I return, i'll share photos when I have it finished.


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I was away a few weeks on vacation. Now that i'm back i'm trying to get my epoxy pour shelf done. I spent a few evenings this week getting my coasters set and coated with mod-podge for the epoxy compatibility. last night my wife helped me set the caps into a thin layer of epoxy to get them sealed in for the bigger pours to come. Tomorrow i'm going to do three epoxy pours spaced 4 hours apart to get my 3/8" wood trim filled up over these things. i've never worked with epoxy before but i've read alot about the product i'm using and watched their tutorial videos. I'll post some photos next week showing the great finished product or my miserable failure. Wish me luck!

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So I got the epoxy down this weekend without incident. I was pretty stressed doing this as I never worked with epoxy like this before and all this stuff I was embedding was one-of-a-kind mementos from my time living in Germany on the Belgian border. I did three coats on Saturday, a thin seal coat at 6AM, a first thick pour at 11AM, and a last thick pour at 5pm. This filled up the 3/8" space to the edge of the wood trim piece I used. The epoxy I used (from bestbartopepoxy.com) worked great and I'm super happy with the results, it really is super clear and looks amazing.

Next step is to rip the last board for the accent wall to fill that last space down to the epoxy, then I will start to work on finishing the cabinet which will double as my mash tun/HLT holder. That will likely take me some time to get finished.

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Your brew room looks great!! Working with epoxy for the first time, you did a fantastic job, mementos sealed for a lifetime, and something to share with the young lad when he gets older.
 
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With the epoxy finished last weekend I spent a couple hours ripping the last boards for the wood accent wall and got those in place now. It looks great in this room now, I can start to envision the finished room even better and it's got me excited. This weekend we're doing our big annual Oktoberfest party, I've brewed 30 gallons of beer for about 30-50 people. After that this fall it's back to working on the brew room. I'll post an update when I have something worth sharing about.

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So a small amount of progress to update: I got the tile up on the side of the cabinet which will face the burners. I also got my barrel-hoods almost ready to rock. I got them cleaned up and painted on the inside and out with spray paint to prevent rust, and I got the hole cut into them for the ducting which will connect to the vent fans. The weird sized hole in the big one was a PITA to cut, I made a mockup of the ducting from some thin carboard and trimmed that to fit the barrel, then I used that to mark a template onto the barrel and cut the hole, or course it needed to be hung/trimmed a bit 5x times to get perfect. I plan to bend the little tabs I made in the ducting to hold in in place then seal with the good aluminum ducting tape. I didn't do that step yet as I may need to take the barrel down when I trim out that window behind the big white curtain at the moment. Right now i'm working on cleaning up some rustic hardwood to use as a face of the cabinet which will hold the mash tun, then I can grout that tile on the cabinet side. Lastly, I moved my little two-tap setup back into this room, at the moment I have a Saison and Brett Saison I just tapped pouring from there. :)
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So a small amount of progress to update: I got the tile up on the side of the cabinet which will face the burners. I also got my barrel-hoods almost ready to rock. I got them cleaned up and painted on the inside and out with spray paint to prevent rust, and I got the hole cut into them for the ducting which will connect to the vent fans. The weird sized hole in the big one was a PITA to cut, I made a mockup of the ducting from some thin carboard and trimmed that to fit the barrel, then I used that to mark a template onto the barrel and cut the hole, or course it needed to be hung/trimmed a bit 5x times to get perfect. I plan to bend the little tabs I made in the ducting to hold in in place then seal with the good aluminum ducting tape. I didn't do that step yet as I may need to take the barrel down when I trim out that window behind the big white curtain at the moment. Right now i'm working on cleaning up some rustic hardwood to use as a face of the cabinet which will hold the mash tun, then I can grout that tile on the cabinet side. Lastly, I moved my little two-tap setup back into this room, at the moment I have a Saison and Brett Saison I just tapped pouring from there. :) View attachment 648679 View attachment 648678

Beautiful setup! Really looking forward to seeing it complete.

You should probably stand that CO2 tank upright. Full CO2 tanks are partly filled with liquid CO2 and partly filled with CO2 gas and CO2 regulators are designed to regulate CO2 gas only. I could be wrong is someone else wants to chime in with more knowledge on this.
 
Beautiful setup! Really looking forward to seeing it complete.

You should probably stand that CO2 tank upright. Full CO2 tanks are partly filled with liquid CO2 and partly filled with CO2 gas and CO2 regulators are designed to regulate CO2 gas only. I could be wrong is someone else wants to chime in with more knowledge on this.

Hmm you could be right, I hadn't thought of that. It seems to be working fine the last few weeks, but I should figure out a way to secure that cylinder there upright. It was a bit top-heavy there with the dual regulator, which is why I decided laying it down is better than having it fall over!
 
So i've made some progress the last few weeks. I got the face to my cabinet made and mounted on the rough framing. This allowed me to get the tile on the side of the cabinet grouted. I also did the jam extension for the window trim for that last window. I have to now get the cabinet top finished (doing a tile top), but I wanted to run my water and gas lines up through it first so I have to finish my burner stands first. without access to a good metal working shop I made 6 of these brackets with my angel grinder, which was a PITA. These will mount to my current stands and use to attach the burners. I hope to get this finished soon, it will make more sense once I have pictures of it finished. I'm excited though it's starting to really get down to the end on this project and close to getting brewing in this space!
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Question on your epoxy pour:

Did you have any difficulty with your memorabilia trying to float up during that first pour? Seems like that could be a problem so was interested in real life vs pondering.
 
Question on your epoxy pour: Did you have any difficulty with your memorabilia trying to float up during that first pour? Seems like that could be a problem so was interested in real life vs pondering.

Yes if you read up on it there are tricks to make it work. I glued down and sealed the coasters in place with mod-podge which is a clear crafting glue, it worked well. The caps I had to do a thin pour in that section of the shelf and have my wife help me quickly set them all in place into the thin pour (I had them already laid out in place then moved them out of the way for the pour, then quickly set them back into the wet epoxy). It worked well. Although no-where in the online tutorials did I see that it's important to have the cap edges completely submerged in the epoxy. Since i only did that thin pour in the caps area, not over the coasters a few caps near the edges were only stuck into the expoxy for 3/4 of the cap, a bit was open but it was stuck down into the epoxy so it would not to float up. When I did the first thick pour these kept bubbling up air where there was gap in the cap/epoxy and I have about 4 caps where some bubbles got locked into the epoxy. It's only something i'd notice, but just and FYI if you do something like this.
 
How is the progress coming?
A bit slow the last month+ my folks visited for 3 weeks over the holidays so I didn't get much time to work and just hung out. I've done a bit of work getting the last part of my burners finished, as well as figuring out the final step of the gas and water connections at the HLT. I was just working on cutting the tile for the top of the cabinet last night. Once I have that done i'll post another picture.
 
So a quick update, progress was slow since November since we had four separate visits from friends and family since then, which was great but hard to get a lot of project time in. I’ve been working a bit here and there the last few weeks and have the cabinet top just about finished, I do not have a good tile saw those long porcelain tiles were a ***** to get ripped for that last run on the top, but it worked out in the end. I also got the utilities all finished for the HLT. I just need to get a few more coats of lacquer on the wood wrap for the tile top and then I can grout the top and put it in place. That will be a nice milestone when it is done and I get the HLT all setup and ready to rock.



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Looking great!
Did you have to rotate (after the cut was started) the long tile to rip it?
Man that was an adventure, but no. I had just bought a new blade and it was thinner than the piece behind that blade that holds the splash guard in place. Even if I rotated the tile I was still left with a ton of uncut tile in the middle so I just setup a quick plastic splash zone in my shop using some plastic paint sheeting I had and the lumber that is stored on the ceiling, I then removed the splash guard and free-cut the tile after I had marked it with a sharpie. It was a huge huge mess and I got soaking wet, but it was done!

I got the top grouted last week and started working on cleaning up the rustic lumber which I will use to trim out the last window and make cabinet doors for my cabinet from. I was really short on that material so I had to spend a long time figuring out the best way to make all the cuts and not waste material. I hope to get further on that window trim tonight. Below you can see the top with grout, the lumber before doing anything on the planer and after I got it cleaned up with the planer and sander.
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Last night I hung the lacquered rustic trim boards on that last window, and I got my cabinet top fixed to the base with some brackets, and started the work on the cabinet doors. I sloped the cabinet top a bit so if there is a big spill it will come to the front not down the back of the wall. Now I can get my HLT in place and totally finish out the exhaust vents (just a bit of aluminum tape needed), and i'll be working on finishing the doors for the cabinet and I also have the baseboard trim ready that needs to get cut and nailed in place.

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I got some good work in this past weekend. I got my baseboard trim up, and I did a bit of work on my double-boil kettle stand to get the burners mounted (still a bit more to go on that). Sunday before the super bowl I spent about 5 hours polishing up my two keggles. That was a pain but boy do they look nice! I did a bit more work on the cabinet doors this week so far, it's really getting close to the end i'm super excited!

Below is the photo post baseboard trim.
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Here is one keggle pre-polish
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And here it is a few hours later
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Cabinet doors got glued together last night first coat of lacquer going on them tonight.
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A lot of unphotographed progress this week. I got my doors all ready to mount on the cabinet. I spent a bunch of time making the interior of the cabinet look nicer by throwing a couple coats of white paint on the inside of it so it matches the tile on the wall with the doors open, and put some leftover vinyl tiles I had around on the floor of it. I also got the connections between my barrel hoods and the ducting finished with some aluminum ducting tape, that looks great and man those fans suck some air! This weekend I'm going to (hopefully) finish up the last bit of the gas flexy connections between the rigid gas piping in the room and my burners, that will be a big moment when I do a test run of the burners!

I do have a photo of the cabinet interior looking nicer below.
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Some great milestones (and setbacks) encountered this weekend. I was able to test out my burners on Sunday! The HLT burner was working great, there is less airflow around my boil kettle burner stand design so that was burning super fuel rich. I did a bit of reading online about troubleshooting these wok burners, i'm going to try removing some of the burner tips and play around with lifting the kettle a bit off the stand to increase airflow and see if either of those work to get a nice blue flame with a good range of control.

The setback: Saturday night I turned on the water to the room and was testing out the flow I have which will dump right into the HLT with a 5 gallon bucket. Worked great! I then shut the upper 'fill valve' while the supply shutoff inside the cabinet was still on, putting all the water pressure on the silicone tubing I had used for the flexible connections. I was leaving the room to walk back to my shop and grab a beer, just as I was closing the door I heard a weird noise that sounded like a balloon being blown up and then a huge gushing sound as water leaked out of the cabinet! I quickly shut off the water at the main coming into the room inside the cabinet but 2-3 gallons of water had already spilled all over the cabinet at the left side wall there. I realize now I was stupid not to think about that problem sooner, I've been using silicone tubing to my RV water filter for years for my brewing water, but in my back workshop I just hook it up the hose bib in there and just flow water a little bit, the tubing never sees any pressure and it has worked for years. I just didn't think about the need to change materials with my new setup. So half of Sunday was spent re-doing those water lines with braided PVC plastic lines rated to 200psi. You can see a photo below of how stretched that nice silicone tubing got before it burst. Either way I thank my lucky stars that it didn't happen when I was back getting a beer and I came back to the room to see 20-50 gallons of water everywhere. I have a little floor drain I put in just for this reason, but it's not plumbed to the outside yet, all the stuff in my storage space under this room would have been a mess! Getting that plumbed in will be a top priority once i'm brew-ready in this room.
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Here is the improved version of the HLT water. I even rigged up a little way for the water to better drain out of that space between the cabinet and the wall if this were to happen again, you can see the little copper 90 which connects to some silicone tubing I caulked into a kind of drain for that space.
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I will say I was thanking my past self that I had the idea to plan for leaks with this cabinet build. I used trim screws for that window trim there, so I was able to easily remove that trim and then the cabinet top (once unscrewed from the base) was able to slide right over so I could clean up the leak in that area and let it dry out overnight.

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For the fun stuff I took a couple of short videos of the water fill into the HLT working, as well as the burners on, but HBT is telling me they are too large to post, sorry I can't share those i'll take more photos next time.

Here is one of the new holes in my keggle, this one if for a thermometer on the HLT. Yes, I know it's low but I placed it so it will still be below the water level if i'm heating 3.25 gallons, which is my sparge amount for a 5 gallon batch. I just bought a bunch of heat shields from brewhardware for my kettles so i'm hoping this wont be an issue.
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Lastly, I got one of the cabinet doors mounted, I think it looks really cool and the rustic lumber matches the window trim really well. I decided to mount the other door in a non-standard way, I'm going to try and just use some blocks on the inside of the door for alignment and then magnets to hold it on. I envisioned that door when open being in my way when brewing, so this way when I brew I could just pull the door off completely and set it in the far corner. We'll see if I can get that to work it will take some monkeying around. Also I'm going to put a pull-out drawer in the cabinet for small things like thermometers and silicone gloves, etc for brew day that you can access once the door is opened. I need to make that next as well.

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I'll post the next update when I (hopefully) have my burner issue sorted on the boil kettle stand and when the cabinet is truly finished. At which point i'll probably be thinking about doing my first batch in here!
 
A few more photos to bring this up to date to how things stand today:

I have my stands welded, a dual burner stand for boiling split batches, and a single stand for my HLT
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In April this spring I did the cool wood accent wall with reclaimed wood from my place (old redwood decking) as well as some old barnwood.
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I made my exhaust hoods from some 55 gallon drums just a few weeks ago. You can also see the cabinet i'm building to serve as a stand for my HLT as well as my coleman extreme cooler mash tun.
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The wood plank ceramic tile flooring was finished last week.

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I worked on the subway tile on the walls this weekend, just finished it Monday night. Now I just need to grout it, doing a darker grey grout.
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So thats how things stand for the moment, once the walls are grouted I can move my cabinet back in, work on finishing that in place, there is now some more trim wood work that can get done in the room now that the tile work is done. I am then going to do an epoxy pour with some coasters on that long shelf under the wood accent wall. I'll update with photos as I make more progress this summer and get closer to brewing in here.

Those subway tiles make it look like an old German brewery from the 40/50s.
 
Any chance your around SLO? Kinda looks Ca coast like.
Nope, beautiful Golden Colorado. We can literally smell mashing grains from Coors in our town if the wind is right. thats' pretty cool. Although more often than not we smell their wastewater treatment plant if the wind is wrong, which is much less cool.

Those subway tiles make it look like an old German brewery from the 40/50s.
I didn't think of that, I lived in Germany for 3.5 years and just loved subway tile I saw around (mostly in subways) around Europe. I think it's one of those things you either love them or don't care for them.
 
Why is this build not electric?
Yeah that would be nice. My house is from the 1950's and the electric panel was upgraded in the 80's or 90's to a 100AMP main breaker and my panel is FULL. To go electric I would need to upgrade my entire main panel and run the wires to this room, easily a 3-5k expense. Running the natural gas lines from a pro cost me $300. If I have to upgrade my main panel in the future for another reason, i'll certainly make it big enough that I could run electric into my brew room.
 
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