Kingston Hotel
When the Federal Capital Territory's liquor ban lifted, Tooheys saw an opportunity in the quiet streets of Griffith. In 1936, the brewery commissioned a proper public house—a statement of intent in a young territory still finding its shape. That building stands now as the sole survivor of its kind, the only inter-war brewery pub remaining in the ACT, a distinction that speaks less to self-importance than to simple endurance. The Kingston Hotel has weathered the decades with the unassuming resilience of a place that was built to be useful rather than remarkable. Inside, the bones of that era persist: the kind of room where a cold beer tastes particularly good, where the bar itself carries the accumulated patina of countless transactions. Over the generations, the pub has evolved into something more expansive than its original brief—a restaurant offering steaks, separate dining spaces, a bottle shop, the infrastructure of modern hospitality—yet it retains the essential character of what Tooheys intended: a local gathering place where people come to eat, drink, and pass time in company. Griffith itself feels like a neighbourhood in repose, the sort of place where a building dating to the 1930s doesn't feel especially old, merely settled. To walk into the Kingo, as locals know it, is to enter a room that has accumulated its own quiet history, independent of grand narratives. The pub functions today much as it did then—a social calendar, occasions marked, the everyday business of hospitality unfolding across its floors. It is precisely this ordinariness, this commitment to simply being a good pub rather than a heritage curiosity, that gives the Kingston Hotel its particular character.