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Goose Island has one brewpub located on Clybourn Ave which serves brunch, lunch, and dinner next to their assortment of beers. [7] The brewpub was sold to Anheuser Busch in 2016, but it still remains a subsidiary of the Fulton Street brewery. [8] [9] The Clybourn Avenue Brewpub closed for renovation in January 2017; [10] [11] it reopened in ...
Goose Island is a 160-acre (65 ha) artificial island in Chicago, Illinois, formed by the North Branch of the Chicago River on the west and the North Branch Canal on the east. It is about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) long and 0.5 miles (0.80 km) across at its widest point.
Goose Island now has national distribution, and some of the beer is produced at other breweries. [143] [144] A taproom at the Fulton Street brewery opened in 2015. [145] The Wrigleyville brewpub closed in 2015. [146] The Clybourn Avenue brewpub was acquired by AB InBev in 2016; [147] it closed in 2023. [148] The brewpub on Blackhawk Street ...
The large facility on the north end of Goose Island (visible from North Avenue, but by car only reachable from the south: Division Street to North Branch to 1132 W. Blackhawk) is the Wrigley Global Innovation Center, a 193,000-square-foot (17,900 m 2) facility, which opened in September 2005 and was designed by Gyo Obata of Hellmuth, Obata and ...
The Fulton River District in November 2006. The Fulton River District is a Chicago neighborhood located on the edge of the city's downtown, northwest of the Loop. The district is bounded by the Chicago River to the east, the Kennedy Expressway to the west, Ohio Street to the north and Madison Street to the south, making it part of the Near West Side and West Town community areas of Chicago in ...
Aerial view of the North Branch of the Chicago River, from the south, with Goose Island, near center. Early settlers named the North Branch of the Chicago River the Guarie River, or Gary's River, after a trader who may have settled the west bank of the river a short distance north of Wolf Point, at what is now Fulton Street.
The Goose Island lead went south and crossed North Avenue, then over an arm of the Chicago River on the Cherry Street bridge to service Big Bay Lumber on Cherry just past Division on Goose Island. At its peak CTM in Chicago serviced just four industries it inherited: Finkl Steel, Peerless Confectionery, Big Bay Lumber, and General Iron Industries.
This company was absorbed into the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway in 1880. [5] The Cherry Avenue bridge was constructed in 1901–02 [1] by the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul to replace a 20-year-old bridge on the same location. [6] It spans the North Branch Canal of the Chicago River providing the only railroad access to Goose Island ...