Tullamore Distillery

The Tullamore Distillery is an Irish whiskey distillery located in Tullamore, County Offaly, Ireland. Built by William Grant & Sons at a cost of €35 million, the distillery officially opened in September 2014.[1] It is the first new distillery to have been constructed on a greenfield site in Ireland in over 100 years, and the first to operate in Tullamore since 1954.[1]

Tullamore Distillery
LocationTullamore
Coordinates53°15′11.2″N 7°30′02.5″W
OwnerWilliam Grant & Sons
Founded2014
ArchitectAcanthus Architects
StatusOperating
Water sourceSliabh Bloom Mountains
No. of stillsFour pot stills
Capacity1.5 million cases per annum
Websitetullamoredew.com
Tullamore Dew
ABV40%

Construction of the distillery is proceeding on a phased basis.[2] When first constructed, the distillery initially had the capacity to produce up to 1.8 million litres of pot still and malt whiskey per annum using four pot stills.[3] However, provision has been made for the installation of a further two pot stills in the distillery, which would double this capacity to 3.6 million litres per annum.[3] Following an additional €25 million investment, a grain distillery and bottling plant were added in 2017.[4] The installation of a grain distillery means that the distillery can now produce all three components (pot still, malt, and grain whiskey) of its Tullamore Dew blended whiskey on-site.[4]

Background

In 1829, the Old Tullamore Distillery was established in Tullamore. In the late 1800s, the General manager, and later owner of the distillery, Daniel E. Williams, launched a whiskey named Tullamore Dew, whose name was taken from his initials, D.E.W. Although the whiskey gained significant success, the distillery later closed in 1954 having suffered financial difficulties. However, the brand was kept alive.

In 2010, William Grant & Sons purchased the brand, the second largest Irish whiskey brand globally, from its then owners, the C&C Group.[5] At the time, Tullamore Dew was produced under contract by Irish Distillers at the Midleton Distillery in County Cork.[2]

As expansion of the brand was limited by their capacity to obtain spirit from Irish Distillers, William Grant & Sons opted to construct their own distillery in Tullamore, the brand's original home.

gollark: Well, I've never tried rat poison as a comparison.
gollark: THAT's it.
gollark: In some places they have "vegemite" instead, which is wrong.
gollark: It's an, er, spread of some sort? You can have it on bread and pasta and stuff.
gollark: There's a "Waitrose" somewhat nearby ish, which is good because they have marmite rice cakes, an excellent food product.

References

  1. "William Grant & Sons opens €35 million Tullamore Distillery". www.irishbuildingmagazine.ie/. 18 September 2014. Retrieved 14 January 2017.
  2. "Proposed Development of the Tullamore Distillery" (PDF). www.epa.ie. Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 13 January 2017.
  3. "Tullamore Distillery". liquidirish.com. Retrieved 13 January 2017.
  4. "With New Distillery, Tullamore D.E.W. Is Going Grain To Glass". Whisky Advocate. 5 December 2017. Retrieved 14 February 2018.
  5. "William Grant's acquisition of C&C completed". The Drinks Report. 1 July 2010. Retrieved 14 February 2018.
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