"I love sitting in here," said my friend, and I had to agree. We were having lunch at Freehouse, the North Loop newcomer — and most ambitious project, by far — from the Blue Plate Restaurant Co., the growth-minded dynamos behind the Edina Grill, the Lowry, 3 Squares and other popular (and populist) destinations.
Seriously, what a great room. It inhabits the massive loading dock of a historic biscuit bakery, and its voluminous levels of exposed brick and raw concrete are a loft-dweller's dream. Arranged in gently cascading tiers, the bar and dining rooms capitalize, like all get-out, on the show-and-tell side of the contemporary dining-out experience.
And not just people-watching. In keeping with the building's industrial past, a design team from the Minneapolis office of Gensler — led by Kate Levine, Betsy Vohs and Courtney Armstrong — has treated the fascinating mechanics of beer-making as a three-dimensional storyboard.
The trio didn't forget their sense of humor. Why not approach the challenge of storing 72,000 pounds of malted barley outside the front door (and what is clearly destined to be a boffo patio) in a galvanized corrugated iron silo? It might be the city's cleverest restaurant signage, and it gives the neighborhood a delightfully kitschy landmark, a 30-foot campanile of sorts, and a sly visual shout-out to the state's agribusiness roots.
Or why not cover a ceiling in sawed-off beer kegs? Or christen that room after the Minnesota congressman most associated with Prohibition? Then anchor it with a 4- by 6-foot portrait of Rep. Volstead, his Puritanical image — right down to a prodigious mustache — rendered in beer bottle caps, a la Chuck Close? (the artist is Jason Hammond of Bolster, the Minneapolis branding firm also responsible for the restaurant's snappy graphics, including some attention-grabbing images projected onto the walls).
There's even a free parking lot, a major asset for anyone who has dared to immerse themselves in the frequently Olympian feat of seeking an open meter on the neighborhood's streets. And for all of its big-box square footage, the dining room still manages to maintain relatively decent conversation-friendly acoustics, a minor miracle.
Think of it this way: If Freehouse were a person, and that person was prone to wearing message T-shirts, theirs would proudly read "Design Matters."
Best with beer
Chef Breck Lawrence's menu covers nearly as much acreage as the dining room.