º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

The couple who risked all to open a craft beer bar in the pandemic - and turned it into a £500,000 business

Claire and Tim Whalley gave up their corporate jobs and invested their life savings to open Craft Republic - two weeks before the pandemic hit

Claire and Tim Whalley, who run Craft Republic, an independent craft beer bar at Goodsheds, in Barry(Image: WalesOnline/Rob Browne)

It’s not easy starting a business from scratch, let alone trying to start a hospitality business during a pandemic. But that’s what Claire Whalley, 42, and her husband Tim, 41, did when they opened craft beer bar, Craft Republic, within the Goodsheds development in Barry.

The couple opened the business in 2020, after giving up their corporate jobs and investing £60,000 of their life savings to create a bar where people could try all types of craft beer without having to travel or go to beer festivals.

“We’ve both lived on Barry Island for 17 years and both worked in central Cardiff. We were just fed up all the time of not having to go into Cardiff or trek to Bristol to visit a craft beer bar,” said Claire. “We knew there was nothing like that in Barry so we thought, why don’t we take the risk and be first to market?”

Read more: The story of the Welsh afro comb inventor and the challenge of raising investment

Three years on and the pair have built a fully independent bar and spirits company which turns over £500,000 a year. But their journey to get there has been far from smooth after opening in the middle of the pandemic.

Claire recalls people’s reaction when they first revealed their plans. “There were so many people who said Barry wasn’t ready for craft beer. Were we sure we wanted to take the risk?

“Neither of us had any experience in the hospitality industry, no background. We’d spent a lot of time on the other side of the bar enjoying drinks but other than that it was a pure passion project for us,” she said.

Following many years of saving and planning, the couple met Simon Baston, owner of Goodsheds, who loved the concept for their bar and offered them a space in the development. They picked up the keys for the venue in February 2020 - two weeks before the pandemic hit the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ - and spent the first lockdown building the brand and bar from scratch.