Summertime in Wisconsin might get all the attention thanks to the state’s beautiful lakes, waterfalls, and hiking trails, but there’s plenty to do in the colder months too.
Before celebrating the season with sparkles and sugarplums and sleighs and twinkles, there is a darker, devilish December holiday to observe and it's called Krampusnacht.
Brewhouse Inn and Suites, along with On Tap, celebrated an anniversary and an unveiling Friday, Sept. 8. Milwaukee's mayor and other city organizations jumped in on the celebration.
The Brewhouse Inn & Suites, which celebrates its 10th anniversary this year, is seeing a rise in customers with a newfound demand from the group market.
Whether you're taking a road trip across the region or flying into one of the major cities for the weekend, you won't want to miss these Midwest vacation spots.
A new beer-centric bar and restaurant, called On Tap, will soon open in the former Jackson’s Blue Ribbon Pub space at The Brewery District in downtown Milwaukee.
The Brewhouse Inn & Suites was once part of the Pabst brewing complex and serves as the perfect place to hit the hay after a long day of touring and sampling.
What’s better than a run-of-the-mill brewery tour? If you ask TravelPirates (and us), it’s spending the night at the former Pabst Blue Ribbon Pabst Brewing Company.
Milwaukee's Brewhouse Inn and Suites is among the seven best brew hotels in the country, according to the deal hunters at travelpirates.com, a travel search website and app.
Every diehard fan of iconic Pabst Blue Ribbon beer needs to plan a sleepover at The Brewhouse Inn & Suites, which used to house the original PBR brewery and was renovated as a hotel in 2013.
It’s a story that has been told for 20 years. Pabst Brewing Co. closed its Milwaukee brewery in 1996, leaving in its foamy wake a dozen abandoned buildings on a 21-acre downtown site.
Milwaukee is the birthplace of 171-year-old Pabst Blue Ribbon, so if you happen to be in the vicinity, make sure to stay in the appropriately named Brewhouse Inn & Suites.
The Brewhouse Inn was a great staycation, not just because of the retro elegance of this boutique hotel, but because what it represented: my father-in-law spent many years working for Pabst, below the hotel in the "powerhouse."
The Brewhouse Inn & Suites retains elements of the property’s former life, as seen in the now-decorative brewing kettle copper domes used by the factory.
I probably enjoy hotel-shopping a little too much before I travel to a new city, but the place we found in Milwaukee may top the list of coolest hotels I've ever stayed in.
Perched at the edge of downtown Milwaukee, the Brewhouse Inn & Suites is a key part of the Brewery, a new neighbourhood carved out of the picturesque ruins of the former Pabst Brewery complex, once the largest beer-maker in the world.
When management closed the landmark but outdated Pabst Brewery in downtown Milwaukee in 1996, the entire Pabst City neighborhood, as it was then known, became a ghostly 20-acre hole of vacated 19th-century brick factories and warehouses.
This past weekend, I stayed at the coolest hotel…ever. Before I go any further, let me say, I am in no way being compensated for this review. It really is just that cool.
Pabst Brewing took root in Wisconsin’s largest city in the 1880s, when Captain Frederick Pabst assumed leadership of Empire Brewing and started tying a blue silk ribbon around each bottle.
Recent history of the historic Pabst Brewery's buildings 20 & 21 does not provide particularly pretty pictures. But these days, what was old is new again.