Seattle

Georgetown Brewing Nabs Big Warehouse Across From Its Seattle Taproom

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Published on June 24, 2026
Georgetown Brewing Nabs Big Warehouse Across From Its Seattle TaproomSource: Google Street View

Georgetown Brewing Co. has quietly snapped up a 36,544-square-foot industrial building across from its Georgetown tasting room, giving the Seattle brewery extra room for production, storage and distribution without abandoning the neighborhood that put it on the map.

How Word Got Out On The Deal

According to the Puget Sound Business Journal, Georgetown Brewing purchased the 36,544-square-foot industrial building and plans to use the space for future operations. The Business Journal preview, which ran June 24, 2026, described the parcel as sitting across the street from the brewery's tasting room.

Main Taproom Still Anchored On Denver Avenue

The brewery's tasting room and production campus remains at 5200 Denver Ave S, according to Georgetown Brewing Company, and continues to serve as the public face of its Georgetown presence. That Denver Avenue base is the starting point for the short, tightly clustered supply chain the brewery has built in the neighborhood.

Tracking Down The Matching Warehouse

Commercial property records identify a 36,544-square-foot warehouse, Northwest Corporate Park Building D, at 600 S Brandon St, a short block from Denver Avenue. Seattle's building benchmarking data also lists NWCP Building D at 600 S Brandon St with a 36,544-square-foot gross floor area, which lines up with the size reported by the Business Journal.

Built For Beer, Not Boutiques

Public listings for the Northwest Corporate Park building highlight features such as roughly 22-foot clear height and multiple dock doors, infrastructure that fits canning lines, cold storage and bulk warehousing. Those characteristics would allow Georgetown to separate heavy production and packaging from the tasting-room experience while keeping everything within easy walking distance.

Why Georgetown Still Holds The Line

City planning documents and local industrial studies continue to identify Georgetown as a working industrial node where breweries, light manufacturing and distribution coexist, making expansions like this a natural fit. The city has repeatedly framed Georgetown as an area where preserving industrial uses and modernizing infrastructure are priorities for both economic development and transportation planning.

For now, the purchase keeps Georgetown Brewing rooted in the neighborhood it helped define while giving the company a practical way to grow capacity without moving its public taproom. The Puget Sound Business Journal preview did not list a sale price or a timeline for when the new space might come online.

Seattle-Real Estate & Development