Tag Archives: Mick Hart in Polessk

A postcard featuring the former Albert Blankenstein Brewery, now Polessk Brewery in the Kaliningrad region.

Polessk Brewery: Revisited in the autumn of 2025

Restored breweries should brew and purvey craft beers. Polessk Brewery does.

7 July 2026 – Polessk Brewery: Revisited in the autumn of 2025

POLESSK BREWERY, formerly the Albert Blankenstein Brewery, founded in 1840, is no small building, so, not surprisingly, the renovation project on which I expatiated in a post entitled Restoring the Polessk Brewery (2021) is still ongoing. During autumn past, I took time out to revisit this splendid neo-Gothic monolith, whose social and economic significance and, more to the point, the nature of the products that it historically purveys – and here we are talking beer – conjoined with its architectural style, have everything going for them that appreciation could desire.

Prior encounters, of which I believe there were three, were either undertaken in summer, the height of the tourist season, or coincided with special events, so it felt rather odd but no less fascinating to venture to this exotic place in an out-of-season capacity when other mortals were busy elsewhere, doing what, I have no idea, when they could, like me, have been up to something not without validity, such as supporting their local brewery by toasting its venerable history with beer once again brewed on its premises.

A postcard featuring the former Albert Blankenstein Brewery, now Polessk Brewery in the Kaliningrad region.

The feature image shows the Albert Blankenstein Brewery reproduced in postcard format during its turn-of-the-20th-century heyday. Comparisons of this view taken from the front of the brewery can be made with the photographs taken by us of the restorative process as it appeared in 2021: see Restoring the Polessk Brewery.

It did not bother me a jot, on completing the flight of stairs and making an entrance into what is effectively the brewery’s main reception hall, that apart from Olga and me, the only other evident person was the young chap behind the bar. Ye who are acquainted with my predilections and lifelong habits will not need me to tell you that the motive for this reprisal, I am not ashamed to say, was to ascertain if the worthy project had remained true to its stated trajectory and was now, as in days of old, brewing and selling beer again, in which regard I am pleased to disclose I could not have been more delighted.

Albeit a little early in the day for a wise and sensible man like me to initiate imbibing, as there was no one else to do it for me, it would have been rude, as the saying goes, had I deferred for the sake of propriety an act that seemed unconditionally proper in contrast to the alternative, which would have been to observe misguidedly a churlish point of temperance. Besides, the day it was rather cold, so what could be more appropriate than warming it up with a chilled glass of beer?

  • The rustic interior of the Polessk Brewery with a curved glass display case, wooden barrels, and bundles of dried wheat on a planter.
  • Smiling man with gray hair and beard, wearing a navy jacket, sits at a wooden table with a beer mug in hand. It's Mick Hart, expatkaliningrad.com
  • Ornate wooden wall cabinet with an oval mirror; reflection shows a bearded man. It's Mick Hart from Kaliningrad!
  • Rustic indoor hall with wooden picnic tables, barrels, and warm hanging lights.
  • Vintage beer sign mounted on a wooden shelf in a rustic room; the sign shows a woman in a dirndl holding a beer and the German slogan 'Bier ist wie Urlaub im Glas'.
  • Rustic beer-brewing display with wooden barrels, pumpkins, burlap sacks, and a Cyrillic sign on a cutting board centerpiece, shelves with glassware in the background
  • Vintage metal bottle carrier with grid compartments, a few green bottles inside, resting on a wooden barrel in a rustic room.
  • Two decorative ceramic bottles with flip-top stoppers and wicker handles, featuring old-fashioned folk-art scenes on a wooden table.
  • Rustic beer tasting room in Polessk Brewery with wooden barrels, long picnic tables, and info boards along whitewashed walls.

Polessk Brewery: Revisited in the autumn of 2025

As there was no one to compete with, which meant that we had the unbridled run of the place, there was ample space and opportunity for getting reacquainted with this fine old building’s history, aided and abetted to no unexceptional extent by its superb exhibition graphics and many excellent didactic panels, and all the while enjoying in their various appointed places scattered memorabilia of assorted brewing shapes and kinds, all of which, in their obsolescence, were glorious and engaging. The fact that this educational as well as recreational tour can be undertaken, as it should, whilst indulging in the very product on which the 19th-century brewing plant had built its reputation enhances and consolidates the overall experience

Indeed, whilst indulging in absorption, I was so absorbed by industrial history that I bought two litre bottles of the end result to take away for further contemplation, as there was little doubt in my mind to instigate the contrary that I would not give them my best attention later that evening at home. And on this score, I could hardly have been more accurate than if history yearned to prove to me that it does indeed repeat itself, as we are frequently led to believe it does by those who know better than you and I. An exotic doctrine, to be sure! But perfectly acceptable if the space or place prescribed by history to which we must return is one we are ready to vouch for and one that is worth revisiting, and here we need to introduce that unequivocal asseveration that the Polessk Brewery has worked so hard for and which, therefore, it so richly deserves. Praise where praise is due: Raise your glasses, ladies and gentlemen; let’s drink to the brewery’s continued success!

Where it is and how to get to it

The Polessk Brewery
Rabochaya Ulitsa, 3, Polessk, Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia, 238630

Tel: +7 921 262-60-28

Location: 31 miles (50km) away from Kaliningrad

Travel time and cost by taxi: approximately 45 minutes from Kaliningrad; fare approximately £20 (2,062 roubles)

Travel time by bus 152: approximately 1.5 hours from Kaliningrad; fare from £2.57 (265 roubles)

Copyright © 2018-2026 Mick Hart. All rights reserved.

Further reading:

Olga Hart in a coat standing on a rock on the ice-covered Caronian Lagoon at sunset c. March 2026.

Polessk in Winter is Rather More Than a Frosty Atmosphere

And you can’t argue with that, can you!

18 June 2026 – Polessk in Winter is Rather More Than a Frosty Atmosphere

Do you know there’s a rather rude English expression that goes, ‘I don’t want to piss on your fireworks’, wryly meaning ‘I don’t want to spoil it for you’, which, being a gentleman, I would never use, particularly as the opening line for a blog post, in the same way that I would never say, in the first month of summer, that in ‘less than six months’ time it will be Christmas’; for who, after a long, drawn-out, bitterly cold and exhausting winter, such as the one Nature treated us to in Kaliningrad this year, would want to be reminded at this escapist juncture of the unravelling seasons of the cold, ice and snow, from which it seems we have only just emerged, when we are yearning, body, mind and soul, for sun, warmth and pretty women wearing summer dresses?

You might well consider it perverse, therefore, that in the midst of my understanding almost all I profess to understand, I go ahead willy-nilly in the contradictory manner of a British politician doing exactly the opposite of what he promised before he was elected, but, as it is with politicians, memory rarely recognises the virtue of fidelity, so that being unfaithful to one season whilst embracing quite another suggests an equal portion of love for those devoutly courted in the past and for those with whom contentment brightens life at present, permitting you to pick and choose as and when and how you choose with self-proclaimed impunity.

Thus it is, without further, if any, considered apology, unless to make allowances for the damp condition in which you find your fireworks, that a perverse pleasure falls to me to introduce to you an unseasonal series of photographs that recollect a winter’s day in and around Polessk, a Kaliningrad regional town, which, long ago in German times, was known by the name of Labiau, with one or two appended photos taken somewhere else but on that same petrified day and not so dreadfully far away as to make my inclusion of them beyond the remit of my title.

Polessk and thereabouts

On the Polessk Canal Road to Matrosovo
WWI/WWII German Gun Emplacement Polessk Kaliningrad
Restoring the Polessk Brewery in the Kaliningrad Region
The Natural Beauty of the Baltic Coast Kaliningrad
Support the Restoration of Zalivinio Lighthouse Kaliningrad

Polessk in Winter

Polessk, ice-bound river and canal (4 March 2026)

Russian gent in a brown coat walking on the frozen surface of the Deyma River carrying two bags.
Russian chap ice-fishing seated on the intersection between the Deyma River and Polessk Canal with
a row of colourful boat houses along the shore in the background.
Frozen Deyma River in Polessk, Russia, with tire tracks on the ice, reeds along the banks, clear blue sky, distant people sitting on the ice far ahead.

Eagle Bridge

Mick Hart in a black jacket and knit hat leaning on the red railing of Eagle Bridge, Polessk, beside a heavily frozen river.

Curonian Lagoon, Frozen

Olga Hart in a red hat stands on large rocks along a snow-covered and frozen Curonian Lagoon at sunset.
Is it Batman? No, It’s Olga Hart standing on a bolder in the frozen Curonian Lagoon silhouetted against a huge surreal twilight sun.

On your bike! It’s the Phantom Cyclist!

Life-size scarecrow figure with a pale mask and red helmet, holding a bicycle wheel, standing in a yard by a metal fence in Zalivino, Russia.

The Ponart Brewery Beer Shop

Entrance to Polessk Ponart Beer shop. A black sign in white lettering above a glass display window and white door; tiled steps and metal railings.
Shop sign with large white stylised lettering on a black background above a glass door. The sign includes the word 'Ponarth' and a year '2015' on the left. It is the Polessk Ponart beer shop.
Corner store on a grey, three-storey building with a blue awning, along a brick sidewalk and quiet street. Two satellite dishes are mounted on the side of the building.

👉👉👉👉👉👉👉Ponart Brewery in the Strange Case of Creation

Mick Hart in a black jacket and knit hat stands at a bar, holding a bottle of drink, his nuts in front of him; chalkboard menus glow in the background.

Copyright © 2018-2026 Mick Hart. All rights reserved.

Mick Hart Polessk German Gun Emplacement

WWI/WWII German Gun Emplacement Polessk Kaliningrad

In the grounds of the Polessk Brewery, Kaliningrad, Russia

Published: 15 November 2021 ~ WWI/WWII German Gun Emplacement Polessk

In a post published on 8 November 2021, I wrote about the restoration of an old German brewery in the former German town of Labiau, now known as Polessk, located in the Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia.

Moreover >>>>>> Polessk in Winter is Rather More Than a Frosty Atmosphere

The grounds of the Polessk brewery back onto the Deyma River (German: ‘Deime’). Contained within those grounds, facing the river, sits the dramatic remains of a wartime German gun emplacement.

WWI/WWII German Gun Emplacement Polessk Russia
Polessk WWI/WWII German Gun Emplacement Kaliningrad region

This chunky, reinforced concrete, above-ground bunker or blockhouse, which ever description you prefer, is one of the few survivors of a battery of such emplacements, more than sixty in total, which formed an awesome line of defence along the Deyma River.

The emplacements date to the First World War but were recommissioned during the Second World War as part of the formidable East Prussian defence system constructed by the Germans in preparation for the Soviet invasion.

WWI/WWII German Gun Emplacement, Polessk, Kaliningrad

According to what I have been told, after Königsberg fell to the Soviets in April 1945, the concrete fortifications along the Deyma were systematically obliterated in order to ensure that should the tide of military fortune ever be reversed they could not be employed again.

Relatively speaking, the surviving emplacement is in sound condition. Although the back has been taken out, the living quarters and the gunnery room are virtually unscathed, and the inside still retains the reassuring feeling of immense solidity. Cramped, some might think horribly, the bunkers were not completely devoid of some semblance, albeit slight, of ‘home comfort’. The existence of a metal flue shows that at least provision had been made for a source of warmth and possibly the means by which to make a brew and heat up food. The reinforced metal door to the combat room has gone, but the giant iron hinges on which it used to pivot remain intact as do other metal fixtures.

The gunners’ view from the front of the emplacement, which now faces the reed bed on the edge of the Deyma River, is, in every sense of the word, a commanding one. In theory it should have offered the bunker’s occupants a strategic advantage against any attack launched from across the water but as history has proved on many occasions the notion of an impregnable defence system is purely that ~ a notion.  

View from German Gun Emplacement Polessk
View from the WWI/WWII German gun emplacement in the grounds of the restored German brewery in Polessk, Russia
History board German Gun Emplacement Polessk Russia
Plan of the wartime gun emplacement in Polessk, Kaliningrad region, Russia, including medals awarded for Soviet bravery during the East Prussian campaign

History boards on and inside the emplacement detail its method of construction, describe its operational system and place its fortification principle in the wider military context of the WWII East Prussian campaign.

Mick Hart in Polessk, Kaliningrad
Mick Hart next to the history board in the WWI/WWII gun emplacement in Polessk, Kaliningrad region, Russia

So, when you visit Polessk Brewery stave off your irrepressible need to imbibe knowledge on beer production, and when brewing recommences your overpowering need to imbibe beer too, and take a few minutes or more to lap up the historic information and martial atmosphere redolent in and around this monumental defence post. It is an intriguing and poignant window upon German/Soviet military history.

History of military campaigns in East Prussia & the Brewery Polessk
History of Soviet military action in East Prussia and the former Labiau Brewery, now Polessk Brewery, which is undergoing restoration

Related Posts on WWII History of Königsberg (Kaliningrad)

Restoration of Labiau Brewery in Polessk, Kaliningrad Region

Fort Dönhoff (Fort XI) Kaliningrad

Königsberg Offensive Revisited

Battle of Königsberg

Immortal Regiment Alexei Dolgikh Kaliningrad
Alexei Dolgikh (1910-1987) MVD Kaliningrad.

Immortal Regiment Alexei Dolgikh

Copyright © 2018-2022 Mick Hart. All rights reserved.

Image attributions
Königsberg in ruins as a result of Allied bombing. (Photo credit: Dylan Mohan Gray. (Public Domain))
German soldiers in trenches: (Photo credit: By Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-R98401 / CC-BY-SA 3.0, CC BY-SA 3.0 de, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5368820)
Königsberg in ruins as a result of Allied bombing. (Photo credit: Dylan Mohan Gray. (Public Domain))