
(c) Anthony Bloomfield
Set in the quiet courtyard of Guildford House, The Brew House offers the perfect venue for:-
- Presentations
- Workshops
- Lectures
- Seminars
- Large or Small Meetings
- Training Sessions
- Interviews
- Receptions
Lunch and Light refreshments are available
An historic venue for your next meeting available for hire in Central Guildford. Not far from the peaceful River Wey and the villages and countryside of the North Downs. Guildford is only 9 miles from the M25 and thirty minutes by rail to London Waterloo. Guildford House is 5 minutes walk from the main line railway station

(c) Anthony Bloomfield
THE MEETING ROOM
The meeting room area is 9.4m x 9.2m, with a maximum capacity of 50 people, either in Theatre Style or for a reception. The flexible space can be laid out in classroom, ‘U’ shape seating or Boardroom style.
Projection equipment (34mm or overhead) is included in the hire, together with screen, flip chart, TV and video.
CATERING
The Gallery Café are able to provide all your catering requirements, from light refreshments, morning coffee, afternoon tea and full lunch.
Arrangements can be made direct by calling 01483 454608.
If you prefer ‘self-catering’ there is a kitchen leading off the main room of the Brew House, which is fully equipped with cups, saucers, kettle, tea pots etc.
PARKING
Guildford House is within a short walk of the following Car parks: York Road, Guildford Civic, Leapale Lane (short stay only), Farnham Road, and Bedford Road. Park and Ride is also available. Vehicles can be parked at the back gate for loading/unloading by arrangement only.
HIRE RATES
Half Day (4 hours) £80.00
Full Day (09.00am to 4.30pm) £160.00
Evenings (5pm to 10pm) £160.00
(Rates apply 1 April 2003 to 31 March 2004)
GUIDED TOURS
Take advantage of being in this historic Grade I Listed Building, and enjoy a tour of Guildford House or the current exhibition at the time. We would be happy to arrange this to compliment your own event. Please ask for details, and discuss your requirements.
THE BREW HOUSE - A short history.
With access through Guildford House this separate building can be found in the quiet courtyard at the rear. Historically used for brewing beer, the Brew House is now available to hire for meetings.
Beer was the staple household drink until the mid-nineteenth century. Everybody, young and old, would drink significant quantities of beer every day. It was nutritious, and healthier than water, in as much as the boiling would have destroyed water-borne bacteria. Whilst strength and quantities varied widely, a gallon a day was a typical intake. This could be drunk as follows: - two pints for breakfast, a pint mid-morning, two pints with the mid-day meal another pint at four in the afternoon, and the remaining two pints after work. Most of this beer would have been brewed at home for household consumption and substantial houses would have a separate brew house such as the one at Guildford House.
The brew house was typically sited behind the main house and often shared the function of a laundry and bake house. Brewing, baking and washing all need fire and water.
The brewing process essentially involved making a solution of starchy sugars, which would then be fermented by yeast and flavoured with hops. Hops were introduced into England during the later Middle Ages and beer largely replaced ‘ale’ – which is unhopped – by the mid-seventeenth century.
The brewer’s first task was to boil water in a large cauldron known as the copper. This would then be poured over the malt-cracked, semi germinated barley – in a large wooden tub known as the mash tun. The mash would be stirred or ‘rowed’ with a brewer’s oar to dissolve the sugary malt. The resulting starchy liquid – the wort – would then be cooled. The temperature was critical – it should not be too hot for the yeast to survive, nor so cool that it would prevent fermentation. The fermentation vessel was usually another large wooden vat. Having fermented, the resulting ale would be returned to the copper for a second boiling with hops. These acted as a flavouring and preservative. Having cooled, the beer was put in casks ready for drinking.
Typically, brewing was carried out once a week, though the process could take longer than a day. This freed the brew house for baking and laundry on other days. A standard 36-gallon barrel could supply perhaps five people for a week. The ordinary household beer was relatively weak in alcohol, but by increasing the proportion of malt to water – and hence the specific gravity of the wort – stronger beer could be made for special occasions. The malt itself was usually bought from specialist suppliers, for the process of soaking, turning and kilning the barley grain required great experience and skill.
Sadly beer is no longer made (or drunk) in The Brew House. Instead, the ground floor is used for storage, whilst the First Floor has been converted into a meeting room, right in the centre of the historic market town of Guildford.
Photography by Anthony Bloomfield www.dreamcatcher.co.uk/tbwpage/