Grand dame of Brisbane pubs reopens – and it’s all change out back

2 hours ago 2

This bayside classic has been reimagined with a new beer garden and a $2m kitchen featuring a woodfired oven and a Josper rotisserie and grill. Take a look.

Matt Shea

Don’t worry, the Grand View Hotel is still the Grand View Hotel.

You might wonder what’s become of this bayside icon as you drive the requisite 45 minutes from the CBD down Old Cleveland Road to witness its emergence from a 16-month refurbishment.

Out front, the reopened Grand View Hotel looks much the same.
Out front, the reopened Grand View Hotel looks much the same.Markus Ravik

For every successful pub do-over, there are 10 bad ones. But surely not the two-storey “Grandy” – one of the oldest hotels in Queensland in continuous use – with its distinctive brick and timber facade, lace iron balustrades and corrugated iron roof?

Pull up outside the pub on North Street and you’d be forgiven for wondering if it’s been refurbished at all.

Out front, it looks more or less the same: the mustard-yellow paint job is the same, and the familiar palm trees line the footpath. Walk off the street into Dr Bob’s public bar, and you might encounter the same rusted-on regulars.

“You could draw a line through the middle of the pub,” venue manager Richard Harrison says. “The front bar, gaming room and TAB are one sort of pub. And then out here, it’s a big food and beverage pub.”

Kickon Group has built an expansive pergola behind the venue.
Kickon Group has built an expansive pergola behind the venue.Markus Ravik

Harrison is sitting beneath an expansive, vertiginous pergola out the back of the Grand View. It’s a breezy open-air space painted white and decked out with ceiling fans and modern pale timber furniture. Framed by towering trees – with the North Stradbroke Island ferry’s superstructure poking through the foliage in the distance – it’s a lovely spot for a frothy or two.

At one end is a standalone kitchen that features a pizza oven and a sizeable Josper set-up comprising a rotisserie and grill.

Expect the typical array of pub classics given an upmarket lick via the flames of the pizza oven, and the Josper rotisserie and grill.
Expect the typical array of pub classics given an upmarket lick via the flames of the pizza oven, and the Josper rotisserie and grill.Markus Ravik

The clever treatment more or less leaves the existing heritage-listed structure completely separate (although construction on the kitchen had to stop when the team uncovered a well dating back to the mid-19th century; it’s now enclosed in glass and lit at night, acting as an eye-catching feature). But then owner Kickon Group has form with this sort of thing, both in the city – it operates the Plough Inn at South Bank and the Osbourne in Fortitude Valley (among other venues in other cities) – and the regions, with its reopening of the Continental Hotel in Sorrento, on the Mornington Peninsula in Victoria, in 2022.

“We’re not trying to make the Plough,” Harrison says. “We’re not trying to make the Osbourne. This is the Grand View. So if it needs a different offering, we’ll cater to that. It’s a credit to Craig Shearer, our CEO and founder. He’s so big on the venue’s personality, and catering to each venue’s needs.

Kickon has retained much of the heritage character of the pub’s front section.
Kickon has retained much of the heritage character of the pub’s front section.Markus Ravik

“It makes it so much more enjoyable and rewarding to be part of when you and the staff are shaping what you do for the locals.”

To eat, expect the typical array of pub classics given an upmarket lick via the flames of the pizza oven, and the rotisserie and grill.

The Grand View’s public bar remains much the same.
The Grand View’s public bar remains much the same.Markus Ravik

For seafood, there’s sesame-crusted squid with wasabi aioli and fresh lemon; Moreton Bay bug rolls with cress, fresh lemon and a Marie Rose sauce; a one-kilogram mussel pot with your choice of sauce; and local king prawns served with a cocktail sauce and fresh lemon. There are classics such as chicken schnitzel that can be tricked up to a parmi, and there’s a burger menu that features a pumpkin and chickpea version, a steak sandwich served on Turkish bread, and a honey chipotle fried chicken burger.

Pizzas range from a classic margherita to gussied-up takes on chilli and prawn, pepperoni, and ham and pineapple.

The refurb isn’t entirely finished, with more shading to be added to the back garden.
The refurb isn’t entirely finished, with more shading to be added to the back garden.Markus Ravik

The Josper set-up, though, is where you imagine the kitchen will see much of the action. The Grand View is billing its rotisserie as the largest in Australia, and its roasting chicken by the whole or half, with the bird also making an appearance in a roll on the burger menu.

Steaks range from a 200-gram eye fillet to a 300-gram rib fillet, and a 300-gram 120-day grain-finished sirloin.

For drinks, there are 48 beer taps across the entire venue pouring a mix of craft and big-brand beers, a tight 30-bottle wine list, and eight cocktails that split the difference between signatures and classics.

Locals have been filing back into the Grand View since it quietly reopened on Friday.
Locals have been filing back into the Grand View since it quietly reopened on Friday.Markus Ravik

There’s still plenty more to do, Harrison says, with extra shading to be added outside alongside the pergola. But after having the doors shut for 16 months, you get the impression Kickon couldn’t wait any longer to get them open again.

“The people out here are just relentless in their love of this place,” he says. “I was standing out here moving sprinklers at 7.30am and people are walking over asking, ‘Are you open?’

“But now they’re coming in telling us they’re so happy it’s back, which in turn makes us happy, I guess.”

Open Mon-Thu 10am-10pm, Fri-Sun 10am-11.30pm.
49 North Street, Cleveland, (07) 3884 3000, gvh.com.au

Restaurant reviews, news and the hottest openings served to your inbox.

Sign up

Matt SheaMatt Shea is Food and Culture Editor at Brisbane Times. He is a former editor and editor-at-large at Broadsheet Brisbane, and has written for Escape, Qantas Magazine, the Guardian, Jetstar Magazine and SilverKris, among many others.

From our partners

Read Entire Article
Koran | News | Luar negri | Bisnis Finansial