Distilling shares many parallels with architecture. Centering around human experience and craft, the art and science of distillation has roots worldwide. From Mesopotamia to ancient practices in India and China to modern distilleries around the world, the architecture of distillation is shaped by the process itself. Today, distillery design for facilities that produce beverages like vodka, gin and whiskey has evolved alongside technology and history. The resulting spaces are incredibly inventive, beautiful buildings that are as practical and functional as they are open and inspiring.
By separating the components or substances from a liquid mixture by using boiling and condensation, new spirits are created. The architecture that houses this process is often designed around an apparatus known as a still. These stills create beverages that usually have a high alcohol content or those that are separate from other fermentation products. Distilleries require a generous amount of room to accommodate this production and on-site storage. Exploring distillery design through plan and section drawings, the following projects show how these buildings are made with multiple levels and open-floor plans. Located across multiple continents, they are as diverse as the spirits themselves, and together, they illustrate the parallels between distilling and design.
Callington Mill Distillery
By Cumulus Studio, Oatlands, Australia
Jury Winner, 11th Annual A+Awards, Bars + Wineries
Callington Mill is the biggest whisky distillery in Tasmania to date, and houses sizable distillation and production equipment. But the building was made to settle respectfully into the surrounding heritage site rather than overshadow it, as seen in the precise plan drawings. Formally, the gables of the new distillery are derived from historical precedents, reminiscent of utilitarian rural sheds that are common in the surrounding landscape, as well as a subtle nod to the industrial processes stored within. The new distillery is minimalist in appearance. Its contemporary nature is revealed through details including floor to ceiling glass walls that line the entry and divide the gables into two pavilions.
Middle West Spirits Distillery
By JBAD, Columbus, OH, United States
The team designed the tasting room and adjacent private events room with an exposed ceiling structure and a new skylight over an antique bar and seating. This welcoming, public-facing area is neatly organized in plan. A large set of collapsible window panels open to a street-side patio. In this way, the reimagined distillery directly participates in and amplifies the lively retail and entertainment neighborhood. Behind the public spaces, the production area features a series of industrial, steel-structured mezzanine levels climbing to the uppermost sections of the stills to provide access for operations and maintenance and for public tours.
Chuan Malt Whisky Distillery
By Neri & Hu, Emeishan City, Leshan, China
While shan represents strength and permanence, shui represents fluidity and transformation; they are two opposing yet complementary forces. The architecture itself manifests this balanced duality in many ways, with the industrial buildings as a modern interpretation of vernacular Chinese architecture, and the visitor buildings as elemental geometries grounded in the terrain. Three long buildings housing the whisky production facilities are situated at the north side of the site; parallel in formation, they are tucked into the natural gentle slope of the land. In contrast to the vernacular roots of the industrial buildings, the two visitor experience buildings are built upon fundamental geometries: the circle and the square, which in Chinese philosophy represent heaven and earth.
Puni Distillery
By Werner Tscholl. Architekt, Glurns, Italy
Inside the double height of the production zone there are views to the underground silos and the stills from the store situated at the entrance level. All the functions and the three stories of the building are wrapped within a lattice of cement blocks, colored with soft earth tones, forming a modular scheme that’s also used in farm buildings of the area. As the team explained, the complex on the outside appears as a simple cube with a series of small gaps in the lattice. Construction-wise, this lattice is the project’s most unique element, formed by cement blocks manufactured with an additive that makes them impermeable, and they are set apart from the inner surface of glass.
Bombay Sapphire Distillery
By Heatherwick Studio, Hampshire, United Kingdom
Jury Winner, 2015 A+Awards, Factory Warehouse
The connection of the glasshouses to the still house allows waste heat from the distillation process to be recycled to maintain the warm climates for the plant species to flourish. This process and the circulation of heat is clearly seen in the section drawings. The fluid geometry of these new glass buildings was influenced by recent advances in glass technology and by Britain’s rich heritage of botanical glasshouse structures. The new botanical distillery achieved a BREEAM ‘outstanding’ rating for sustainability; the first facility in the drinks manufacturing industry to be awarded this rating.
The Macallan Distillery and Visitor Experience
By Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, Moray, Scotland, United Kingdom
Internally, a series of production cells are arranged in a linear format with an open-plan layout revealing all stages of the process at once. These cells are reflected above the building in the form of a gently undulating roof, formed by a timber gridshell. Easter Elchies House – an original 18th century Highland manor house – remains the primary focus of the estate with the main access to the new visitor centre located near this building. A subtle manipulation of the terrain is used to reveal the built form and control views. The distillery project celebrates the whisky-making process as well as the landscape that has inspired it.
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