Brick & Tin: Difference between revisions
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* Carlton, Bob (March 11, 2014) "Brick & Tin restaurant's new Mountain Brook location opens today" {{BN}} | * Carlton, Bob (March 11, 2014) "Brick & Tin restaurant's new Mountain Brook location opens today" {{BN}} | ||
* Meares, Hilary (January 28, 2019) "Brick and Tin’s downtown location gets a makeover and extended hours." ''Bham Now'' | * Meares, Hilary (January 28, 2019) "Brick and Tin’s downtown location gets a makeover and extended hours." ''Bham Now'' | ||
* Thornton, William (November 16, 2020) "Brick & Tin closing downtown Birmingham location." {{BN}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Latest revision as of 16:53, 16 November 2020
Brick & Tin (stylized brick & tin.) is a gourmet sandwich shop at 214 20th Street North in downtown Birmingham which opened July 5, 2010.
The restaurant is owned by Mauricio Papapietro, former chef de cuisine at Frank Stitt's Highlands Bar and Grill. Papapietro, a Birmingham native and Altamont School graduate, decided on the restaurant's name after the previous tenant's purple Sheetrock and 1980s-era white drop ceiling tiles were removed to reveal the circa-1905 building's bare brick walls and pressed-tin ceiling.
The redevelopment of the space was led by real estate developer Joseph McClure along with Erik Hendon of Hendon + Huckestein Architects.
Brick and Tin features an L-shaped bar with an open kitchen will run along the south wall of the building, allowing customers to sit and watch the chefs while they work. The menu features nine signature sandwiches served on bread baked fresh in the store. Along the north wall, patrons can sit on old pews salvaged from a church in Shelbyville, Tennessee and dine on tables found at flea markets and thrift shops. The restaurant seats about 50 customers.
Papapietro opened a second location of Brick & Tin in March 2014 at 2109 Cahaba Road in Mountain Brook Village. Transformation of the former Village Dermatology offices was overseen by Kyle D'Agostino and Appleseed Workshop. The Mountain Brook location bakes the breads used in both restaurants.
In 2019 the original location was remodeled. The interior brick was painted white and the bar was extended to the front of the dining area with new light fixtures. Service hours were extended to evenings and Saturdays, as well. The downtown restaurant closed in November 2020 as a result of the 2020 Coronavirus pandemic.
References
- Carlton, Bob (February 19, 2010) Gourmet sandwich shop to be set in historic downtown Birmingham building." The Birmingham News
- Carlton, Bob (July 6, 2010) "Brick & Tin gourmet sandwich shop opens in century-old building in downtown Birmingham." The Birmingham News
- Carlton, Bob (March 11, 2014) "Brick & Tin restaurant's new Mountain Brook location opens today" The Birmingham News
- Meares, Hilary (January 28, 2019) "Brick and Tin’s downtown location gets a makeover and extended hours." Bham Now
- Thornton, William (November 16, 2020) "Brick & Tin closing downtown Birmingham location." The Birmingham News
External links
- Brick & Tin website
- Brick & Tin on Facebook.com