Here’s a quick recap of a Connecticut real estate story with a side of local beverage nostalgia. Avery’s Soda’s historic New Britain site is up for sale—almost an acre, anchored by the “Red Barn” where soda bubbled for about a century.
The listing throws in a two-family, 3,400-square-foot house, vintage bottling gear, and advertising memorabilia. It’s all under S-2 zoning, which opens the door to a surprising mix of uses.
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So, what’s actually up for grabs? Who’s involved? And what could this mean for Connecticut’s long-running small-bottler scene, from New Britain to Hartford and, honestly, wherever else these quirky sodas traveled?
Historic property and sale details
The Corbin Avenue property is listed at $485,000 and centers on the Red Barn—a working beverage production spot built around 1890. They’ve got it down as a food-processing site and call it an “incredible opportunity.”
There’s also a two-family house (3,400 square feet) with long-term tenants. Each unit has three bedrooms, a full basement, newer roofs, and upgraded electrical panels.
Thanks to S-2 zoning, the property could become almost anything: single-family homes, licensed child-care, certain educational or religious uses, or even a small business run from home.
Property features at a glance
Beyond the walls, the parcel holds vintage bottling equipment and advertising memorabilia. These are the kinds of details that nod to Connecticut’s history of small bottlers.
Amodio & Co Real Estate is handling the listing, held by Five Hundred Ten Corbin Avenue LLC. They’re pitching it as a rare shot to save a slice of regional beverage history—or maybe give it a new twist.
Avery’s legacy: flavors, tours and community impact
Avery’s Beverages made waves over the years with novelty flavors like the 2022 “Putin Punch” (proceeds went to the Ukrainian Red Cross), and 2024’s Kamala Colada and Trump Tonic. The company also pulled in visitors with its “Totally Gross” line, created for plant tours aimed at kids. Factory visits turned into mini community events.
Rob Metz bought Avery’s in 1999—he was the fifth owner—and he transformed tours into interactive experiences. That move sparked signature flavors like Swamp Juice and boosted sales. Production jumped from about 15,000 cases in 2008 to over 30,000 by 2012. By 2016, they projected 37,000 cases. In 2025, Patrick Moore of Hilltop Apiaries reportedly bought the soda business, shifting production to a new New Britain location.
The Connecticut footprint: tours, flavors, and regional memory
It’s really a chapter in Connecticut’s industrial story. The Red Barn property sits right among the state’s old beverage trails, remembered by locals and visitors who still talk about factory tours and neighborhood pop-ups.
Even though production moved, the site’s memorabilia and equipment keep a physical link to the days when regional taste shaped a neighborhood’s vibe.
What the sale could mean for Connecticut’s industrial heritage
The Five Hundred Ten Corbin Avenue LLC listing points out how a legacy site might get a second act for modern times, without erasing its roots. S-2 zoning means the new owner could go in several directions—residential, commercial, maybe a licensed child-care, or something educational or faith-based.
With the house and barn still standing, plus vintage gear, someone could dream up a hybrid space that mixes living, small-batch production, and community events. Will it happen? That’s up to whoever grabs the keys next.
Nearby Connecticut towns with beverage heritage to watch
- New Britain
- Hartford
- Waterbury
- Bridgeport
- New Haven
- Stamford
- Norwalk
- Danbury
- Bristol
- Manchester
The Avery’s Soda property isn’t just another piece of real estate. It’s a slice of Connecticut’s manufacturing story—quirky, proud, and full of history.
Investors, preservationists, maybe even a few dreamers, can’t help but wonder what’s next for this site. For over a century, it’s shaped local taste, and you can almost feel that legacy in the air.
Here is the source article for this story: CT site dubbed ‘historic’ and ‘famous’ is for sale. You just might have heard of it.
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