Sixty one taps, numbered and color coded by style, with a red light that flashes every time a fresh keg goes on.
Taphouse runs 61 taps at Lavendelstræde 15, a block off City Hall Square, and it is the widest draft wall in Denmark. The list is numbered and color coded by style; when a new keg goes on, lights flash red and the board stars the fresh pour.
Tripadvisor ranks it second of 207 nightlife spots in Copenhagen across hundreds of reviews. BeerAdvocate logs it as a reference stop for traveling beer drinkers.
Who would hate it? Anyone who freezes at a menu with sixty one decisions. Everyone else gets a flight.
One long modern room where every sightline ends at the tap board. Tripadvisor reviewers describe a comfortable atmosphere, friendly staff, and locals holding the bar stools against the tourist tide. It is one of the few rooms in the city that pours proper flights.
IPAs dominate the board, backed by sours, stouts, pilsners, and Belgian styles, with Danish breweries holding a steady share of the 61 lines. The color coding makes the wall navigable in one glance.
Order a flight first and commit second. Watch for the red light; the freshest keg in the building announces itself.
Traveling beer drinkers ticking a list, office workers off Rådhuspladsen, and locals who treat the stools as reserved. Friday and Saturday run to 3am and feel like it.
