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Odd News

Let the good times flow: Belgium to build beer pipeline under Bruges

Tired of delivery trucks rumbling near its picturesque canals, Belgium’s medieval town of Bruges has approved the construction of a beer pipeline to link a five-century-old brewery to a bottling factory nearby. The 1.9-mile underground pipeline will link the De Halve Maan brewery in the heart of the “Venice of the North” to an industrial park where the beer will be bottled and shipped to thirsty drinkers worldwide, the company’s director Xavier Vanneste said. Once fully approved and constructed, the pipeline will keep 500 trucks out of the city’s cobblestoned alleys every year, about 85 percent of the town’s lorry traffic.

The idea is borne of environmental and quality of life concerns, and not economic ones.

Xavier Vanneste, De Halve Maan brewery director

Beer has been brewed on the site for nearly five centuries and 100,000 tourists visit the premises every year, a major stop on tours of Bruges, which is a UNESCO World Heritage site. But to avoid harming the city’s Gothic facades and medieval belfry, pipeline construction will use some of the latest technologies perfected for the transport of oil and gas. The brewery will pay for the pipeline, Belgium’s first, though Vanneste was unable to estimate the cost at this stage. Construction is expected to begin next year.