Factory 76,19: Difference between revisions
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==Current Events== | ==Current Events== | ||
'''March 11th, 2010''' - building is lit and barricaded. We should put a danger level in this factory as an essencial resource building. -- [[User:Travis Vercetty|Travis Vercetty]] 13:54, 11 March 2010 (UTC) | |||
'''November 30th, 2009''' - building is repaired and unlit. Barricade at VHB. --[[User:OO Willie|OO Willie]] 05:39, 30 November 2009 (UTC) | |||
Construction noises and running generators can be heard sometimes during the day, and the fence is slowly being repaired. | Construction noises and running generators can be heard sometimes during the day, and the fence is slowly being repaired. | ||
Latest revision as of 06:07, 8 October 2024
Factory 76,19 |
a factory
Pashenton [76, 19]
Basic Info:
|
The Travka Vodka Distillery
Description
In the late 1980s, Commisar Evgeni Ivanushkin (also known as Ebanashka among Russian immigrants), a Soviet defector from the Red Army, was installed in Malton by the British government for his own safety. Given ₤350,000 for information about Soviet invasion plans by the government, Evgeni settled in the industrial suburb of Pashenton, in the Northeast of Malton, and purchased an old mansion in which he intended to distill and sell fine Russian vodka.
Growing up in Kamchatka, a remote Peninsula in Siberia, Ivanushkin's family had distilled Vodka for hundreds of years, and he used the knowledge he had gained from working in the small family distillery, along with some contemporary engineering principles picked up in the army engineering corps, to build and produce a very fine Russian style potato vodka, which quickly became reknowned throughout Malton and elsewhere.
Produced in small quantities, the price of a bottle could be as high as ₤75, and orders were known to have been sent to local MPs, mayors, and other British personalities. Since the distillery had no tasting room, and the Vodka was hard to come by in stores, Ebanashka entered into an exclusive distribution agreement with The Burchell Arms, who from then on always had a few bottles on hand.
Immediately after the outbreak, the main distillery building burned almost completely to the ground, though the stone office and storage buildings still stand today. Lately, though, there have been efforts to revitalize the small distillery, and it's possible that sometime soon, the factory could be up and running again, supplying the bedraggled survivors of Malton yet another reason to stay alive: Fine Russian Vodka.
Barricade Policy
In accordance with the Pashenton barricade plan the location should be Extremely Heavily barricaded at all times.
Current Events
March 11th, 2010 - building is lit and barricaded. We should put a danger level in this factory as an essencial resource building. -- Travis Vercetty 13:54, 11 March 2010 (UTC)
November 30th, 2009 - building is repaired and unlit. Barricade at VHB. --OO Willie 05:39, 30 November 2009 (UTC)
Construction noises and running generators can be heard sometimes during the day, and the fence is slowly being repaired.