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Bourbon Pursuit

441 - Engineering a Rickhouse with Buzick Construction

Bourbon Pursuit

Bourbon Pursuit

Hobbies, Food, Arts, Leisure

4.9866 Ratings

🗓️ 21 December 2023

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We've all been driving through bourbon country and been amazed at the rickhouses that paint the country side. But what goes into building and engineering those? Buzick Construction has a long family history in the whiskey business, with their family building multiple rickhouses for Jack Daniel's. Today, the average size of a rickhouse is 50,000 barrels, presenting engineering challenges compared to older 20,000 barrel ones in terms of weight load, airflow, and temperature control. We brought their President, Donald Blincoe, and chief engineer, Kevin Aldred, on the show to talk about what goes into building a rickhouse. We talk about different wood types, exterior materials, precise airflow design needs and humidity considerations. We also dive into the costs because a rickhouse run into the millions these days. Overall, Buzick has been the name in construction around Bardstown and has a reputation in these time-honored warehouses. Show Notes: Above the Char with Fred Minnick (@fredminnick) talks about food and whiskey pairing Talk about the history of Buzick Construction How many rickhouses did your great grandfather build for Jack Daniel's? Do you have a patent on the ricking system? What's the average size of rickhouse today? How did the engineering change when going from 20,000 to 50,000 barrel rickhouses? Do you have to defend your plans to local governments and municipalities? What options do you have when building such as wood types? What's the usual cost for building a rickhouse? How do you design for airflow? Do you have to go into older buildings and modernize them? What is the preferred exterior material to use now? Does creating a heat controlled warehouse interfere with natural flow? Have there been any crazy requests for rickhouses like a smart rickhouse? Support this podcast on Patreon

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Yeah, some stuff we may have to decline to comment too much.

0:03.7

Our clients make us sign NDAs and that kind of thing.

0:06.2

Oh, yeah.

0:06.7

Good.

0:07.2

We can talk about that, too.

0:33.1

This is Bourbon Pursuit, the official podcast of Bourbon, bringing to you the best in news, reviews, and interviews, with people making the bourbon whiskey industry happen, and I'm one of your hosts, Kenny Coleman.

0:39.5

So we've all been driving through bourbon country and been amazed at the rick houses that paint the country landscape.

0:42.6

But what goes into building and engineering those?

0:51.7

Busea construction has a long family history in the whiskey business, with their family dating back to building buildings and multiple rickhouses for Jack Daniels.

0:55.5

And today, the average size of rickhouses is reaching around 50,000 barrels. And that presents engineering challenges compared to those older 20,000 barrel ones,

1:01.5

in terms of weight load, airflow, temperature control, and much more. So we brought back on

1:06.8

their president, Donald Blinko, and he brought his chief engineer, Kevin Aldrin, to talk

1:11.4

about what goes into building a rick house. We talk about different wood species, exterior

1:16.3

metals, precise airflow design needs, and humidity considerations. But we also dive into the

1:21.9

cost because a rickhouse, they can run up into the millions of dollars these days. Overall, music has been the name in construction around Barts Town

1:30.4

and has a reputation in these time-honored warehouses.

1:34.5

With that, enjoy this week's episode,

1:36.4

and now here's Fred Minnick with Above the Char.

1:39.9

I'm Fred Minnick, and this is Above the Char.

1:45.9

This week's idea comes from Tom Pacey, who writes me on fredminic.com.

1:50.9

When tasting whiskey, we pick up on notes that bring to mind foods we've experienced.

1:55.8

Do you ever experience the opposite?

...

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