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Beavertown Brewery

Beer brands of EnglandBreweries in LondonBritish companies established in 2011Food and drink companies established in 2011Heineken brands

Beavertown Brewery is a British brewery based in Tottenham, London. It was acquired by Heineken in 2022. Beavertown was founded in 2011 by Logan Plant, the son of Robert Plant, singer with Led Zeppelin. The brewery's name came from the nickname for de Beauvoir Town, the area of London where its first beer was brewed, Duke's Brew & Que on Downham Road, London N1, and which was unexpectedly closed in 2017. In June 2018, it was announced that Heineken would be buying a minority stake, so that Beavertown could spend £40 million on a new brewery and visitor site. The new brewery was launched in 2020, with a capacity of 500,000 hectolitres, a ten-fold increase in their previous capacity. Beavertown currently produce mostly IPAs, with special seasonal beers on rotation.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Beavertown Brewery (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Beavertown Brewery
Lea Valley Road, London Ponders End (London Borough of Enfield)

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Wikipedia: Beavertown BreweryContinue reading on Wikipedia

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N 51.645 ° E -0.03 °
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Lea Valley Road
EN3 4XX London, Ponders End (London Borough of Enfield)
England, United Kingdom
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Chingford Reservoirs
Chingford Reservoirs

The Chingford Reservoirs are the King George V Reservoir and the William Girling Reservoir, which form part of the Lee Valley Reservoir Chain in the London Boroughs of Enfield and Waltham Forest and Epping Forest in Essex. Construction of the King George V Reservoir was started in 1908 and completed in 1912. Work on the William Girling Reservoir was started in 1938, with John Mowlem & Co being the contractor, but owing to technical problems, and the intervention of World War II, the reservoir was not finished until 1951.The reservoirs are a 391.3 hectare biological Site of Special Scientific Interest, of which 316.3 hectares are in London and 75 hectares in Essex. They are comparatively shallow and provide open water habitat for wildfowl, gulls and waders.The reservoirs are major wintering grounds for wildfowl, including nationally important populations of shovelers and great crested grebes. They also attract significant numbers of goldeneye ducks, tufted ducks and goosanders. The reservoirs are also one of the capital's main roosting site for gulls; 70,000 of these have been recorded at one time, the majority being black-headed gulls, common gulls, lesser black-backed gulls and herring gulls.Since the 1950s, the reservoirs have been providing a refuge for wildfowl while they are vulnerable during the late summer moult, and in some years, moulting flocks of great crested grebe have also used the reservoirs as a refuge. The reservoirs have also been used by migratory birds as a stopover site in autumn and spring, and yellow wagtail regularly breed here. A total of over 85 species of wetlands birds have been recorded at the site.