Now that homebrew rights have expanded in KS to allow normal club activities, I’ve been talking to some guys about starting a club in our area. Meeting at member homes may be fine for a while, but I imagine we will need a larger space and a static location fairly fast…ideally free. Any tips for us?
A LHBS has offered to let us use their space, but it’s very small and we will easily outgrow it.
I don’t think our local community centers allow alcohol. There are no breweries in the general area where we would like to establish the club.
My club is about 130 paid memberships with many of those memberships including a significant other. We still sometimes meet at people’s houses during the summer months (when we can use a backyard in MI). Turn out to our meetings is usually 50-60 people. Most of the time we meet up at various breweries and craft beer bars around town. We pretty much never meet up at the same place twice in a row. We move around a lot. We work it out with the owners to come in usually on their slowest night of the week. We encourage our membership to purchase food and drinks prior to the meeting.
Check with local churches. A club I belonged to years ago met at a Unitarian church. The space was large enough for 60 people. Southern baptist might be a bad choice if you want to bring beer.
My home club meets at a brewery. They have a classroom and banquet space.
Current club meets at breweries and bars. No Homebrew allowed. They also host monthly brew days where most of the drinking occurs.
Changing up the location appeals to me, but I imagine you would have to coordinate communications very well so people don’t show up at the wrong place. If I were hosting at my house, I wouldn’t want my address on a public website or social media site. How do you handle these things?
In my opinion, meeting in a public place is a necessity for any club looking to grow. I can think of few things more frightening than going to someone’s house (that you don’t know) to see if you are interested in joining their club. A public meeting space provides a bit more cover for the first time visitor to see if this is a group that meshes with their ideals. I realize that it is very difficult to find an adequate public meeting space, but it is something that every club should try and achieve. A noisy restaurant is not ideal since its tough to have the group conversations that make a meeting like this worthwhile.
Sure, if there are rules against homebrew at that public space, have another monthly meeting at a home or somewhere else so that the true focus of the club (homebrewing) can be exhibited. But providing that public meeting space is an important way to encourage new members to check your club out.
Public locations get posted on our homepage, private residences the address is kept in our private forums (of which you need to be a member to access that section). In those cases the homepage might say something like "May meeting at John Smith’s house, check forums (link) for address.
Ha. KCBM got kicked out of a church in KS - which is what started this whole ‘change the law in KS thing’. We fought for two years (a member wrote the bill and our President testified several times in the House and Senate) and spent a good chunk of money towards lobbyists on getting the laws changed in KS.
Ironically, we are having a tough time finding a place that will house as many members as we have in KS! :o We are still meeting on the Missouri side of the state line, but I can’t imagine we can stay there forever.