The scent of barley and salt danced on the morning breeze as I stepped onto Qingdao’s streets for the last time, a city famed for two great loves: beer and the sea.
Brewing Through a Century
The Tsingtao Brewery Museum sits on Dengzhou Road at the site of the original factory founded in August 1903 by the Anglo-German Brewery Co., Ltd., originally known as "Germania-Brauerei Tsingtao Co., Ltd." Leveraging Qingdao’s pristine spring waters, German yeast strains, and imported hops, it created a German-style lager that would become a national icon.
The brewery’s journey mirrors Qingdao’s own story—foreign influence, control shifts after World War I and II, and eventual emergence as a Chinese enterprise. Today, the beer flows on, evolving alongside the city through reform and modernization.
A Living Timeline
Entry begins with a simple QR-code scan, then unfolds across three halls: a history and culture zone, a production hall showcasing vintage and modern brewing gear, and an interactive multimedia space blending archive footage with real-time brewing demos.
Where Sea Meets Story
Leaving the red-brick compound, I wandered to the waterfront. The salt-tinged air, rolling waves, and lingering malt aromas felt like a final toast to Qingdao’s layered past.
Qingdao’s tale—like its lager—is a blend of global currents and local character. Here, every sip and sea breeze reminds you that some impressions linger long after the trip ends.
Reference(s):
Last day in Qingdao: From barley to the sea, and smiles that linger
cgtn.com




