Trucks were too expensive and unworkable, so the brewery’s proprietors decided to install an underground pipeline to transport the beer. Under the glittering spires and historic cobblestone alleyways of Bruges, the lifeblood of Belgium now flows at a rate of more than 1,000 gallons per hour, a significant increase from previous levels.
De Halve Maan, a brewery in the Belgian city of Bruges, is building a two-mile-long subterranean beer pipeline to deliver their beer from the bottling facility to the city’s central business district.
How many bottles of beer will go down Amsterdam’s underground pipeline?
If all goes according to plan, enough beer to fill 12,000 bottles an hour will slop down a two-mile subterranean pipeline from De Halve Maan (Half Moon) in the city center to a bottling factory outside the city. Vanneste was motivated when he noticed workers placing internet lines outside his house and raced out onto the street on the fly of the moment to assist them.
Is Belgium’s first major beer pipeline about to start pumping beneath Bruges?
Assuming all goes as planned, enough beer to fill 12,000 bottles every hour will pour down a two-mile subterranean pipeline from De Halve Maan (Half Moon) in the city center to a bottling factory outside the city. As soon as he noticed workers placing broadband wires outside his house, Vanneste was motivated and raced out into the street to assist them.