Credit: Jason DeSomer

Four years after opening their first brewpub on North Mississippi, StormBreaker Brewing owners Dan Malech and Rob Lutz expanded in May to a second location in the St. Johns neighborhood.

While I sip a hazy Jurassic Juice IPA (which Iโ€™m told was not named to coincide with the release of Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom), Malech explains that watching the build-up around their rented outpost on Mississippi made them realize it was time to seek more permanent roots elsewhere.

โ€œMy main reason was, looking at our current location and our current space, which we love, it could be bought or torn down or turned into a condo,โ€ he says.

After a yearlong process, the duoโ€™s search for stability finally paid off, and they purchased the building on North Lombard that formerly housed Plewโ€™s Brews and the St. Johns Dentist Office.

With the wall separating the two previous businesses torn down, the space is flooded with natural light, and features lumber-heavy dรฉcor with high ceilings, booths, old photos of the neighborhood, decorative saws, and rustic woodwork salvaged from the buildingโ€™s original rafters and walls. Outside, thereโ€™s a covered, dog-friendly patio with a mural of the St. Johns Bridge painted by local artist Chris Bigalke.

The new space presents plenty of new opportunities for StormBreaker: Thereโ€™s a full bar and kitchen, allowing the team to expand their non-sudsy offerings. The menu features slightly more adventurous pub fare, and itโ€™s worth noting that on a recent visit the โ€œJucy Lucyโ€ cheeseburgerโ€”despite being stuffed with Fontina and smothered in bacon jamโ€”was a lowbrow paragon of greasy goodness, adorned with the unholiest of all toppings: bread-and-butter pickles.

The new spot also has a gigantic back room where theyโ€™re in the process of setting up a small brewing system, though 95 percent of production will remain at the original location for the foreseeable future. For now, Lutz says theyโ€™re doing their best to keep up with demand and maintain variety at both locations throughout the busy summer season.

That back room will also contain something less expected: axe-throwing lanes. When asked to elaborate on precisely what the sport entails, Malech explains, โ€œItโ€™s basically like darts with a giant wood target.โ€

Itโ€™s not exactly uncharted territory: Last month, local collective Portland Axe Throwingโ€”which will oversee the flying blades at StormBreakerโ€”found a permanent home at Feckin Brewery in Oregon City.

Though drinking alcohol and flinging hatchets might seem like a risky combination, Malech insists itโ€™s not actually as dangerous as it sounds: โ€œThe way itโ€™s set up, the blades are pretty dull. Itโ€™s in cages. Itโ€™s super-safe; itโ€™s monitored. Nobodyโ€™s gonna come murder anyone,โ€ he adds, knocking on one of the new pubโ€™s reclaimed-wood tables.

Formerly a senior editor and the music editor at the Mercury, CK Dolan writes about music, movies, TV, the death industry, and pickles.

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