Ola Brew opens new taproom in Hilo
- Ola Brew

- Jul 22, 2021
- 3 min read
Ola Brew has opened its second location, a taproom in Hilo. Located at 1177 Kilauea Avenue, at the corner of Kekuanaoa Street, the taproom opened to the public July 7 but launched with a soft opening for first responders July 2 and 3.

“Our whole mission is to support the growth of the agricultural economy here in Hawaii,” President Naehalani Breeland said. “And so this is just another outlet and a different location that we can actually … source more locally-sourced ingredients from our local farmers on this side. Then just with all the ingredients we’re putting into our beverages, we can accelerate that growth as well.”
Breeland said Ola Brew can now network with East Hawaii farmers they may not have had the opportunity to work with in Kona because of the distance.
“We started sourcing from a new lettuce farmer over here,” she said. “We’ll be sourcing from some of the same farmers from Kona side, but again it gives us the ability to work with a lot of farmers over here.”
The company’s production facility and original taproom is located in Kailua-Kona.
“A lot of people anticipated that … if we were going to open a new location, we would open on Oahu, but for us it’s really about supporting our local community,” Breeland said. “And we feel like we’ve created something really special on the Kona side, where anybody that came in felt like it was home … ”
Ola Brew knew it had “something to offer,” and Hilo provides a chance to showcase the ingredients sourced locally, said Breeland, who co-founded Ola Brew with CEO Brett Jacobson.
For example, the tangelos in the company’s tangelo cider come from O.K. Farms in Hilo while the pineapples in its white pineapple cider come from Keaau and Honokaa. “So really being able to showcase those and say ‘hey, we just got our tangelo from right down the street, … we just got our white pineapple from 20 minutes down the road,’ that’s something that we’re really proud of,” Breeland said.
Ola Brew also is “community- and employee-owned,” she said, and had a number of investors from Hilo during its most recent fundraising effort.
“So we were kind of like, you know what? Let’s open over in Hilo. A lot of these … small investors that did invest, have come in over the last couple weeks that we’ve been open, like ‘I invested.’ … So it’s something that people can really see their hard-earned money at work.”
Breeland said response has been incredible.
“We feel so supported. Not only has the local community come out to support, but other local business owners have reached out … so it’s definitely been a warm welcome from Hilo,” she said. “We couldn’t be more stoked to be here. A lot of people are saying this is exactly what Hilo needed, just another fun spot, but for the most part, for us, it’s just another opportunity to showcase what we’re all about, which is creating community.”
The Hilo taproom has a selection of beers and hard ciders, seltzers and teas, along with an Asian-inspired menu created by chef Jeremy Van Kralingen, who grew up in Hilo and recently returned from California.
Van Kralingen said it feels good to be back in Hilo.
“I felt like I got right into it and it feels like all the hard work so far is paying off.”
There are plans for further Ola Brew expansion, but Breeland did not elaborate on what those plans might entail.
She did, however, say the business recently leased 43 acres from Kamehameha Schools to grow ti plants for an okolehao project.
According to Breeland, okolehao, made from the roots of the ti plant, was the first alcohol distilled in Hawaii. As part of the project, Ola Brew will grow ti plants and create a spirit line for okolehao.
“We’ve already won two awards in international competitions for this okolehao,” she said. “It’s probably a year out before we’ll even have it in any of our establishments, then maybe a year-and-a-half before we have it on the market, but definitely really exciting.” Read the original article here About Ola Brew
Ola Brew is an employee and community owned brewery whose mission is to increase the local agricultural economy through sourcing Hawai'i-grown ingredients and incorporating them into their beverages. The brewery has organically driven the beyond beer space in Hawai'i as the first locally produced hard seltzer and hard teas while also brewing up delicious beers and hard ciders. True to their mission, Ola Brew has sourced and purchased over $1.2M in local agriculture since their inception in December 2017.






The sourcing story here is what makes Ola Brew's expansion feel meaningful rather than just commercial — tangelos from down the street, white pineapple from 20 minutes away, and now a new lettuce farmer on the Hilo side. That kind of supply chain transparency builds real trust with customers who care about where their food and drink comes from. Totally unrelated but I've been using the Animal Generator with my kids as a fun way to spark curiosity about wildlife — every click brings up something new and they've been genuinely hooked on it all week.
What Naehalani Breeland describes about investors coming in and seeing their money at work in a physical space is one of the most underrated aspects of community-owned businesses — there's a tangible pride in that kind of ownership that no stock certificate can replicate. The soft opening for first responders was also a genuinely thoughtful touch. For anyone working on the build-out side of hospitality spaces, the Concrete Calculator is worth bookmarking — it takes the guesswork out of material estimation for slabs and structural pours and saves a lot of back-and-forth with suppliers.
The okolehao project is the detail that really stands out here — reviving the first spirit ever distilled in Hawaii and already winning international awards before it's even on the market is a remarkable thing to bury near the end of an article. The commitment to growing their own ti plants on 43 leased acres shows this isn't a gimmick but a genuine long-term investment in Hawaiian agricultural heritage. On a completely different note, I've been recommending the Period Calculator to a few friends lately who wanted a simple, no-frills tool for tracking their cycle without signing up for yet another app.
The decision to open in Hilo rather than Oahu says a lot about what Ola Brew actually stands for — it would have been the easier, higher-traffic choice, but choosing to stay rooted in the Big Island community and build relationships with East Hawaii farmers is exactly the kind of intentionality that makes a brand worth following. If you're ever scoping out a space for a taproom visit or thinking about how much room a venue like this actually covers, the Square Footage Calculator is a handy tool for quick area estimates without any fuss.
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