Bar in Portland, United States
Coopers Hall
100Pearl PointsPortland's urban winery worth the detour.

About Coopers Hall
Coopers Hall is a working winery tasting room in Portland's Central Eastside, not a cocktail bar — and that distinction matters. The warehouse space suits groups and casual afternoon visits, with by-the-glass pours from on-site production you won't find anywhere else in the city. Walk-ins are easy, and the value holds up well against comparable Portland wine bars.
What Coopers Hall Actually Is (And Isn't)
Most people walk into Coopers Hall expecting a bar. It's not quite that. Located at 404 SE 6th Ave in Portland's Central Eastside, Coopers Hall is a winery tasting room inside a working barrel warehouse — which means the drinks program here is built around wine made on-site, not cocktails shaken behind a mahogany counter. If you're coming in expecting a craft cocktail menu in the vein of Teardrop Lounge, reset that expectation now.
The space itself does a lot of the work. The warehouse footprint is large, open, and deliberately industrial — exposed beams, barrel stacks visible from the floor, long communal tables. It's a room built for groups and casual afternoon visits, not intimate two-leading conversations. If you want a tighter, moodier atmosphere, Bible Club PDX or Abigail Hall will serve you better. But for a relaxed pour-your-own-pace afternoon with friends, the scale here works in your favour.
The drinks program at Coopers Hall is where it justifies the visit. Because wine is produced on-site, by-the-glass pours cover wines that aren't distributed anywhere else in Portland. That's a genuine differentiator. You're not working through a list curated from distributors, you're drinking from barrels stored thirty feet away. For wine-curious visitors who want something beyond the usual Willamette Valley pinot-and-chardonnay flight available at most Portland wine bars, that specificity matters. Pair it with the food program (small plates, cheese, charcuterie built to complement the wine list) and the value proposition holds up well against comparable Portland spots charging similar prices for a less distinctive pour.
Booking is easy. Walk-ins are generally accommodated, and the large footprint means you're rarely turned away. This makes Coopers Hall a reliable option when you want something more considered than a brewery tap room, check our full Portland bars guide for alternatives, without the reservation stress of the city's tighter cocktail bars. For broader Portland planning, see our full Portland restaurants guide, full Portland hotels guide, full Portland wineries guide, and full Portland experiences guide.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 404 SE 6th Ave, Portland, OR 97214
- Booking difficulty: Easy, walk-ins typically available
- Leading for: Groups, afternoon wine sessions, wine-curious visitors
- Skip if: You want a serious cocktail program or intimate seating
- Nearby alternatives: 3808 N Williams Ave and 10 Barrel Brewing Portland for a more casual neighbourhood drink
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Coopers Hall worth the price?
Pricing varies at Coopers Hall; confirm via check the venue's official channels.
Where is Coopers Hall located?
Coopers Hall is located in Portland, at 404 SE 6th Ave, Portland, OR 97214.
How can I contact Coopers Hall?
You can reach Coopers Hall via check the venue's official channels.
Location
404 SE 6th Ave, Portland, OR 97214
Portland, United States
Compare Coopers Hall
| Venue | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| Coopers Hall | Easy | |
| Teardrop Lounge | World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Bible Club PDX | Unknown | |
| Multnomah Whiskey Library | Unknown | |
| Rum Club | Unknown | |
| Takibi | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Teardrop Lounge, Notable alternative
- Bible Club PDX, Notable alternative
- Multnomah Whiskey Library, Notable alternative
- Rum Club, Notable alternative
- Takibi, Notable alternative
Against Portland's cocktail-focused bars, Coopers Hall operates in a different register entirely. Teardrop Lounge and Rum Club both run more technically ambitious drinks programs, if the quality of the mixed drink is your primary criterion, both will outperform Coopers Hall. Multnomah Whiskey Library offers the deepest spirits selection in the city, but requires more planning to get in and commands higher per-drink spend. Coopers Hall wins on accessibility and walk-in ease that none of those venues can reliably match.
For atmosphere and intimacy, Bible Club PDX and Takibi deliver tighter, more considered room experiences than Coopers Hall's open warehouse floor. If the physical setting is central to your evening, those are stronger picks. But Coopers Hall has one thing those venues can't offer: wine made in the same building you're drinking in, which is a specific and defensible reason to choose it over anything else on this list.
The value-for-money case is strongest for wine drinkers visiting in a group. You get a distinctive, production-level wine experience without a tasting-room appointment, at a price point that sits comfortably below Portland's more formal wine bars. For equivalent winery-focused experiences outside Portland, the bar program model has some parallels with destination-focused bars like Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, Jewel of the South in New Orleans, and Julep in Houston, all of which justify a visit on the strength of a single, clearly defined drinks identity.
Explore Portland
Save or rate Coopers Hall on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
