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DFSNOLE

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Kentucky Bourbon Warehouse Collapses, Spilling 9,000 Barrels of Whiskey

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (BRUCE SCHREINER) June 22, 2018, 12:55 PM CDT


Louisville, Ky. (AP) -- Thousands of whiskey barrels crashed into a massive heap Friday when a large section of a decades-old storage warehouse collapsed at a distillery in the heart of Kentucky bourbon country.

The damaged warehouse at the Barton 1792 Distillery in Bardstown held about 18,000 barrels, and it appeared that up to half the barrels inside were affected, the distillery's owner said.

"We are assessing how many of the impacted barrels can be recovered," said Amy Preske, a spokeswoman for Sazerac, a Louisiana-based spirits company. "A mix of various distilled products at various ages were stored in that warehouse."

No cause had been determined for the late-morning collapse, but no one was injured, Preske said.

It could be days or weeks before the company fully assesses damage to the warehouse, built in the 1940s, she said.

"At this time, we do not know which Barton 1792 brands or customers will be impacted," she said.

The collapse won't affect normal operations at the distillery. It expects to be open for tours Saturday and to resume normal business operations Monday, Preske said in a statement.

The distillery began its normal seasonal shutdown for repairs and routine maintenance last week, she said. The collapse will not affect bourbon production once the distillery's summer shutdown ends, she said.

The distillery is near a waterway, and officials were checking on whether any whiskey had spilled into it. Initial water samples showed no signs of contamination, Nelson County Emergency Management director Joe Prewitt said.

The structure has a 12-foot (3.6-meter) basement to help contain spills, he said.

Officials from the Kentucky Department for Environmental Protection went to the scene, and distillery workers took a number of steps to minimize any environmental risk, Preske said.

About half the structure holding the rest of the barrels was still standing, said Milt Spalding, a spokesman for the local emergency management agency. Engineers who arrived Friday were looking at "trying to secure what was remaining and trying to contain what had fallen," he said.

Bardstown fire Chief Billy Mattingly said crews had been working on the warehouse earlier in the week.

No one was in the building when it collapsed, the company said.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-06-22/portion-of-kentucky-bourbon-warehouse-collapses
 
Price rise, party of one. That is one heck of a structure. It potentially looks like the failed side was added on. Doesn’t that look like exposed siding on the remaining wall? Just like tobacco barns, it looks like the walls are designed to keep out rain/snow, but allow airflow.
Kentucky Bourbon Warehouse Collapses, Spilling 9,000 Barrels of Whiskey

1000x-1.jpg


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (BRUCE SCHREINER) June 22, 2018, 12:55 PM CDT


Louisville, Ky. (AP) -- Thousands of whiskey barrels crashed into a massive heap Friday when a large section of a decades-old storage warehouse collapsed at a distillery in the heart of Kentucky bourbon country.

The damaged warehouse at the Barton 1792 Distillery in Bardstown held about 18,000 barrels, and it appeared that up to half the barrels inside were affected, the distillery's owner said.

"We are assessing how many of the impacted barrels can be recovered," said Amy Preske, a spokeswoman for Sazerac, a Louisiana-based spirits company. "A mix of various distilled products at various ages were stored in that warehouse."

No cause had been determined for the late-morning collapse, but no one was injured, Preske said.

It could be days or weeks before the company fully assesses damage to the warehouse, built in the 1940s, she said.

"At this time, we do not know which Barton 1792 brands or customers will be impacted," she said.

The collapse won't affect normal operations at the distillery. It expects to be open for tours Saturday and to resume normal business operations Monday, Preske said in a statement.

The distillery began its normal seasonal shutdown for repairs and routine maintenance last week, she said. The collapse will not affect bourbon production once the distillery's summer shutdown ends, she said.

The distillery is near a waterway, and officials were checking on whether any whiskey had spilled into it. Initial water samples showed no signs of contamination, Nelson County Emergency Management director Joe Prewitt said.

The structure has a 12-foot (3.6-meter) basement to help contain spills, he said.

Officials from the Kentucky Department for Environmental Protection went to the scene, and distillery workers took a number of steps to minimize any environmental risk, Preske said.

About half the structure holding the rest of the barrels was still standing, said Milt Spalding, a spokesman for the local emergency management agency. Engineers who arrived Friday were looking at "trying to secure what was remaining and trying to contain what had fallen," he said.

Bardstown fire Chief Billy Mattingly said crews had been working on the warehouse earlier in the week.

No one was in the building when it collapsed, the company said.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-06-22/portion-of-kentucky-bourbon-warehouse-collapses
 
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I'd be surprised if a majority of the barrels aren't recoverable as they're made to be sturdy.
 
Insert gif of John Belushi freaking out as they smash a case of Jack Daniels while moving out..seems fitting.
 
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