![]() ![]() ![]() “We’re not going to go crazy, but we’ll have an expanded menu. “As a beer guy, I’m excited that we’ll have a proper-sized beer cooler,” he says. With regard to food and drink, Galvin says to expect “cool new stuff” alongside familiar favorites. Specifically, the expanded TILT will go from 25 machines to around 40. “More machines, more room for people to lounge and hang out. “I’ve always wanted to grow and expand,” he says. The timeline is “pretty fluid,” and he anticipates TILT-which will soon be rebranded as LITT Pinball Bar for undisclosed legal reasons-will be up ‘n’ running at 2021 Hennepin Ave. ![]() The team behind TILT scored the property for $700,000, though Galvin estimates it’ll take more than a week to bring it back to life. “You could have it up and operating in less than a week,” broker Jeff Salzbrun with Commercial Equities Group told us. In December, Racket broke news that the 10,000-square-foot building was available for $1 million. Lyle’s closed permanently in early 2021, after going dark for about a year due to COVID lockdown measures. Late last Friday, the owners of TILT Pinball Bar finally revealed “the worst-kept secret” in the service industry, according to co-owner John Galvin: The Minneapolis bar will be moving from its current Whittier location and into the iconic Liquor Lyle’s space at Hennepin & Franklin. ![]()
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