
J. Rieger & Co. has opened a new distillery and visitor experience in Kansas City, part of an effort to revive the historic Electric Park neighborhood. (Photo by Gregory & Vine)
J. Rieger & Co. Begins Public Tours At Brand-New Kansas City Distillery
August 1, 2019 –––––– Isabella Vaccaro
Kansas City's Electric Park neighborhood has a new whiskey attraction. J. Rieger & Co. Distillery starts public tours and tastings today after debuting on July 12. Within the 60,000-square-foot facility are all the accoutrements for whiskey-making: mash cooker, fermenters, four different stills. And there's not one, but two bars where guests can enjoy unique and classic cocktails. But the most eye-catching feature has nothing to do with whiskey. No, the first and most conspicuous thing guests will notice upon entering is a 40-foot metal slide meant to carry them, merrily, from the second floor of the distillery to the first.The slide was the idea of head distiller Nathan Perry, an homage to the distillery's location near the site of the former Electric Park, one of the world's first electric-powered amusement parks, which opened in Kansas City in 1899. Complete with theatrics, thrill rides, and notorious fair food, the attraction brought in millions of visitors, including a 9-year-old Walt Disney, who later credited Electric Park as the inspiration for Disney World.
Visitors can slide between the second and first floors as part of the full Rieger experience.
However, while the super-slide may attract the most attention, co-founder and vice president of sales and hospitality Ryan Maybee says “the heart and soul” of the distillery is the Pickerell Production Floor. The massive, glass-enclosed section that houses the stills is named after J. Rieger's late master distiller, Dave Pickerell, who died last November. “Even though we've added this incredible new guest experience, we will always be, first and foremost, a spirits brand,” says Maybee. “Designing our new production floor was one of the last projects Dave Pickerell worked on.”In addition, a 3,500-square-foot historical exhibit will transport guests back to 1887, when Jacob Rieger began producing more than 100 different alcoholic beverages to sell around the world. Today, his great-great-great-grandson, Andy Rieger, wants to share the untold story of the Electric Park neighborhood and his family's spirits business with visitors.
