The Port Office Hotel in Brisbane has reopened its doors after a “devastating” fire ignited in the kitchen and ravaged the building.
The pub’s owners,ย Nick and Meagan Gregorski, bought the establishment back in 2017,ย but on January 23, 2019, a fire started in their kitchen.
Now the kitchen is open and patrons are being served once again,ย Nick Gregorski speaks to SmartCompany about insurance pitfalls, rebuilding a dream, and the importance of community.
Rebuilding from the ashes
The fire was tall enough to lick the ceiling, where it reached something too combustible to control, Gregorski explains.
โWe didnโt see what was in the roof, but there was a lot of smoke and water damage,โ he adds.
As a result, the pair were forced to close the pub for weeks.
At the time, most of the disappointment stemmed from the fact the pair had recently renovated the building. In fact, Gregorkski returns to this several times as we speak.
โWe did a renovation when we first moved inย โ but we didnโt want to do another one,โ he says, laughing a little.
โBits of the restaurant we did up to how we wanted it to be. That had to all be replaced.
โWe had to gut the whole restaurant,โ he adds.
The wistfulness is coloured by Gregorskiโs personal nostalgia, which he used as a loose template for the renovations.
โIt was a bit devastating,โ he admits, reflecting on the โclassic feelโ the pair had introduced.
โI grew up in country pubs, and all the bartenders speak to the customers.
โThatโs what I wanted to bring,โ he explains.
Not all was lost in the fire, however. The Gregorskis used the opportunity to give the entire restaurant and kitchen an update.
โNow weโre Pinterest-worthy,โ he says.
More importantly, the kitchen is more heavily safeguarded thanks to a state-of-the-art canopy.
โI think we did everything properly.
โIt was just an accident.
โThereโs no way that this kitchen can catch fire again,โ he adds.
Insurance pitfalls
Perhaps the biggest learning from the experience was how to deal with insurance, which Gregorski admits is an ongoing lesson.
โItโs been a very stressful time. Weโre still fighting with insurance companies.
โWe may have been a bit naive on a couple of things,โ he admits.
The steepest learning curve, however, came from what he calls โgrey areasโ.
โItโs very complex. Iโve been given five different sums for one area of the insurance, which I find very bizarre.โ
Luckily, Gregorskiโs saving grace came in the form of an insurance advisory, which helped him gather the correct information and spoke with insurance companies on his behalf.
โI wish I had these people on board from day one to help guide me through the pitfalls.โ
Hands-on effort
For all the disappointments and troubles of the last year, Gregorski credits the community for helping to keep hope alive.
โDid we consider walking away? Definitely.
โHowever, this is our life. What would we do besides this?
โWeโd have to find another pub โ โ one that might not be as good as this.
โItโd be a shame for us not to be here,โ he says.
The community has had a history of helping the Port Office Hotel throughout the years. The most memorable in recent history being the Queensland floods of 2011, when people banded together to barricade the pub with sandbags.
โThe community reacted amazingly. Anyone who could help did.โ
He concedes, however, that in this scenario, the practicalities of community help was limited. Compared to floods, fires are less about prevention, and more about reaction.
โYou donโt want to put a lot of people in danger,โ he explains.
โWith insurance, thereโs not much you can do but leave it to the professionals.โ
Even so, Gregorski doesnโt discount the importance of the everyday support that has seen the pub through the years. He and his wife consider themselves hands-on operators, making a point to greet 90% of diners.
โThe regulars that come every day add to the sort of fabric of the pub,โ he says.
โItโs a prime community. They work hard, theyโll come back to support us and get us back to where we were before.โ
The cashflow is not what it was before the fire, he says, but itโs getting there.
โMy smileโs back. Weโre happy with our new restaurant and kitchen.
โThis is just a bit of a blip on our journey,โ he adds.
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