Beginning on February 1, the cool, double-sided hangout will "close" the coffee house at 5 p.m. every day and turn off the wifi. Then it will open up the "tap house," serving eleven local beers and one cider on draft, along with numerous canned craft beers.
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"The space will look a little different with lower lights, no laptops at the bar, and more emphasis on beer," says DBC co-owner Jessica Caouette.
To launch the tap house, DBC is throwing a party that day, featuring $2 cans of New Belgium Shift and $12 Dale's Pale Ale pitchers. There will also be food trucks.
The Denver Bicycle Café, which Caouette and Peter Roper opened in 2011, recently doubled its number of taps in an effort to attract more beer connoisseurs and evening groups; there will be two happy hours, from 4 to 5 p.m., and from 10 p.m. to midnight, along with food trucks, trivia nights, home brewer meetups and cycling events.
DBC has specialized in serving beers made by some of the newer, smaller breweries within the Denver city limits - and has been one of the first accounts for some of them.
DBC's bike shop is also changing: it will now sell bikes from Alchemy Bicycle Company, Turner Bicycles and Ventana Mountain Bikes. As for the coffee shop, it will still focus on locally-roasted coffee and tea.
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