Andrew Stafford 

Crowbar to open in music venue formerly known as the Zoo, after beloved venue’s closure

Fortitude Valley building will reopen its doors in November, months after The Zoo closed after 32-years serving Brisbane music fans
  
  

The Fortitude Valley building that housed the Zoo, a beloved Brisbane music venue, until it shut after 30-years in July. It will continue to serve as a music venue under the name Crowbar.
The Fortitude Valley building that housed the Zoo, a beloved Brisbane music venue, until it shut after 30-years in July. On Tuesday it was announced it will continue to be a music venue, under the name Crowbar. Photograph: David Kelly/The Guardian

When it closed its doors in July, The Zoo was one of the longest-standing music venues in Australia, having opened in late 1992 under the management of Joc Curran and C Smith.

But the beloved venue will now remain a home for live music, with new owners set to reopen the space under a new name in November.

The space formerly known as The Zoo will be renamed Crowbar and operated by Nathan Trad (known as Trad Nathan) and Tyla Dombrovski, who owned a live music venue by the same name that previously operated in Fortitude Valley from 2012 to 2020.

While The Zoo featured a broader spectrum of music, Crowbar stayed tightly focused on heavy metal and punk music until the Covid pandemic forced its closure.

Nathan and Dombrovski opened a second Crowbar in Leichhardt, Sydney in 2018, which is still in operation.

“As a former punter, band member, booker and promoter, playing The Zoo was a great achievement for aspiring bands,” Nathan said in a statement.

“We’re excited to be able to keep music within its walls … Crowbar intends to honour the amazing path laid before us and continue offering great events for years to come.”

The first stage at The Zoo was constructed from timber donated from the film set of Babe. The venue hosted innumerable celebrated shows by national and international artists including Pixies, the Go-Betweens and Ben Harper, and was a significant incubator for a multitude of Brisbane-based acts.

It also served as a midwife for the ongoing collaboration between Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, after Cave joined Ellis’s band Dirty Three on stage in early 1996.

Curran sold the venue in 2016. Shane Chidgzey, who purchased it in 2020, said earlier this year that “a perfect storm” of factors impacting the live music sector had forced its closure.

These included cost-of-living pressures, skyrocketing insurance premiums and the location of the venue in a safe night precinct, intended to curb alcohol-related violence in entertainment areas.

This required additional outlays on security, ID scanners, insurance and rent, said Chidgzey, who also cited declining alcohol consumption among patrons as an issue.

While ticket sales were said to have remained strong until the end, the venue closed with Chidgzey saying at the time “the model is broken” for live music in Australia.

Last year, Apra Amcos found more than 1,300 live music venues and stages across Australia had closed since Covid restrictions began, meaning Australia’s live music scene for small to medium gigs had shrunk by one-third in just three years.

• This story was amended on 18 October 2024 to correct errors added in the editing process and to add further clarification of the distinction between The Zoo and Crowbar.

 

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