East Valley Tribune

May 20, 2013 | 11:53 pm
East Valley Tribune Facebook East Valley Tribune Twitter East Valley Tribune Mobile Version East Valley Tribune Facebook
Best of East Valley 2013

All about the beer: Chandler’s SanTan Brewery expansion to nearly triple output

Company looked at locations outside the city, but will open production not far from existing restaurant

Print
Font Size:
Default font size
Larger font size

Posted: Thursday, March 7, 2013 8:03 am | Updated: 7:28 pm, Tue Mar 12, 2013.

There’s a simple reason why Chandler’s SanTan Brewing Company decided to build a brand new brewing facility – and it’s one that appears to be a good sign for progress of this particular East Valley beverage business.

Capacity.

“It was like fitting 10 pounds into a five-pound sack,” said SanTan owner and head brewer Anthony Canecchia.

The new space near Warner Road and Arizona Avenue will allow SanTan to nearly tripled its output, from 14,000 barrels of beer annually to 40,000.

The brewery opened in 2007 when the concept was still fairly new to the East Valley, save for one or two pioneers in neighboring cities. Now it’s preparing to christen its new facility in April or May, depending on how quickly they can get the doors open.

SanTan’s original location at 8 S. San Marcos Place will continue to serve customers food and signature brews, and the new facility will free up the old brewing center on that site to create new flavors in limited editions and to try new ideas, Canecchia said.

“It allows us to start getting as creative as we want to be in our downtown location,” Canecchia said. “It will allow us to start do the beers we always wanted to brew but have never been able to because of production.”

Canecchia said the brewery’s current retail production will move to the new facility, where the company can expand its market outside of a tightly local distribution ring.

“Ninety percent of what we produce is sold and consumed within 50 miles of the brewery in just a few weeks’ time,” Canecchia said.

Canecchia said the growth of SanTan is a “good sign” of the economy’s slow recovery; the new brewing center is occupying an industrial space that was built in 2008 but never gained a resident as the economy tanked that year.

Canecchia said craft beer is on it way up because of the “buy local” campaigns and that it has stronger more unique flavors than the large national breweries that distribute across the country.

“’Buy local’ is a nice marketing term but it’s also a reality,” Canecchia said. “People are buying local, drinking local, making local.”

Canecchia, who has been brewing beer since 1992 and doing it professionally since 1995, said SanTan has 125 employees and will 25 more positions for the new facility, including labor jobs but he is also looking for a quality control supervisor and other experienced positions.

Canecchia said he believes beer consumers’ demands for stronger and new flavors are driving the market and for this reason, he said that fellow breweries are not his competitors and in fact, he said, “II always say if you don’t drink our beer, drink craft beer.”

That’s because Canecchia believes craft breweries are actually colleagues and are working together to take market share from the national brands.

He points out that national brands sell 30 million cases of beer in the Valley alone annually where SanTan sold about 140,000 cases.

“We’ve got a big pie to keep chopping away at,” Canecchia said.

Canecchia said he’s glad the new facility is also in Chandler.

“It was very important to us to be able to stay in Chandler. We worked very hard to make sure we found a building inside Chandler,” Canecchia said. “I was joking every time we would go look at a building in Tempe, Mesa, Avondale or Gilbert, I thought I was cheating on Chandler. … The city has been so supportive.”

More about

  • Discuss

Welcome to the discussion.

2 comments:

  • dockle posted at 5:09 pm on Sat, Mar 9, 2013.

    dockle Posts: 4

    I predict this place will go down hill very fast. It already has. I was in there about a week ago and always give many places the benefit of the doubt. Well the bartenders were horrible, no personality, the worst pours I have ever seen, literally tossing beer at people with two inches of head. I dont know about you, but I got to a brewery to get the best of the best, not the shaft. Furthermore most of the beer is just fair at best. I used to give them the benefit as I said. Now they are doing this, I sense nothing but complete failure.

    Too many places do not know what service is about anymore. Eventually the good establishment will realize this as people have such good information and choices these days. It's only a matter of time.

     
  • dockle posted at 5:10 pm on Sat, Mar 9, 2013.

    dockle Posts: 4

    Make that money!?!? But your service and product are marginal at best.

     

Rules of Conduct

Welcome!
|
Not you?||
LogoutMy Dashboard

Happening Now...