Bar in Portland, United States · Inside The Heathman Hotel
Library Taphouse & Kitchen
100Pearl PointsSolid SW Portland bar, no fuss booking.

About Library Taphouse & Kitchen
Library Taphouse & Kitchen is a low-friction SW Portland bar best suited to casual evenings and after-work groups. The taphouse format keeps per-round costs reasonable relative to Portland's cocktail-bar alternatives, and the on-site kitchen means you won't need to relocate for food. Walk-ins are realistic most nights, making it an easy call when you want a straightforward local option.
Who Should Book Library Taphouse & Kitchen
If you want a casual SW Portland bar that works equally well for a post-work pint with colleagues or a relaxed evening with someone you've already taken somewhere nicer, Library Taphouse & Kitchen at 615 SW Harrison St is a credible pick. It sits in a part of downtown Portland that skews toward locals rather than tourists, which tends to mean shorter waits and a lower noise ceiling than the Pearl District options. If you've been once and it hit the mark, coming back is low-friction — booking difficulty here is easy, and walk-ins are a realistic option on most nights.
The Space
The taphouse format signals what to expect physically: a bar-forward layout with enough table seating to accommodate small groups without feeling like a canteen. Venues in this bracket in Portland typically run 40–80 seats, with the bar counter doing most of the work for solo visitors and pairs. It's not an intimate cocktail den in the style of Bible Club PDX, and it doesn't have the library-card membership theatre of Multnomah Whiskey Library. What it offers is a functional, unfussy room where the tap list is the main event.
Value Per Round
Without published pricing data available, the leading proxy is the taphouse category itself. In Portland, a standard taphouse round — two craft pints and a shared snack, typically lands between $28 and $42 before tip. That's comfortably below what you'd spend at a dedicated cocktail bar like Teardrop Lounge or Rum Club, where cocktail programs push per-round costs higher. If beer-forward value is your priority, the taphouse model generally delivers better cost-per-drink than spirit-led alternatives. The kitchen component means you can stretch a session into dinner without relocating, which saves both time and a second cover charge. For Portland bar alternatives with a fuller food offer, 10 Barrel Brewing Portland is worth comparing directly.
Booking & Timing
Easy to book. No reservation system complexity, show up or call ahead for larger groups. Weekday evenings and weekend afternoons are the smoothest entry points. If you're planning a group of six or more, arriving before 7 PM on a Friday gives you the leading shot at seating without a wait. For comparable low-friction options nearby, Abigail Hall and 3808 N Williams Ave follow similar booking patterns. For broader context on Portland's bar scene, see our full Portland bars guide, and if you're planning around a wider trip, our Portland restaurants guide, hotels guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the full picture.
Quick reference: SW Portland taphouse, easy walk-in access, beer-forward value, kitchen on-site, small-group friendly.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Library Taphouse & Kitchen have happy hour deals?
Taphouses at this price point in Portland almost universally run happy hour, typically weekday afternoons into early evening. Library Taphouse fits the SW Portland bar-and-kitchen format where discounted pints and small plates during off-peak hours are standard practice. Call ahead or check the door for current times since no published schedule is available online. If nailing a deal matters, arriving before 6 p.m. on a weekday is your safest move.
What's the crowd like at Library Taphouse & Kitchen?
Expect a mixed SW Portland crowd: nearby Portland State students, office workers from the Harrison Street corridor, and neighbourhood regulars. It reads younger and more casual than Multnomah Whiskey Library, without the cocktail-focused destination crowd you'd find at Teardrop Lounge. Weekend afternoons tend to draw a relaxed, unhurried mix; Friday evenings get louder and more post-work in energy.
What's the signature drink at Library Taphouse & Kitchen?
No single signature drink is documented for Library Taphouse, but the taphouse format puts rotating Pacific Northwest craft drafts at the centre of the offering. If you're coming primarily for a curated cocktail list, Rum Club or Teardrop Lounge will serve that need better. Library Taphouse is the right call when a well-kept pint in a no-pressure setting is the goal.
Is Library Taphouse & Kitchen worth the price?
Pricing varies at Library Taphouse & Kitchen; confirm via check the venue's official channels.
Location
615 SW Harrison St Suite B, Portland, OR 97201
Portland, United States
Compare Library Taphouse & Kitchen
| Venue | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|
| Library Taphouse & Kitchen | Easy |
| Teardrop Lounge | Unknown |
| Bible Club PDX | Unknown |
| Multnomah Whiskey Library | Unknown |
| Rum Club | Unknown |
| Takibi | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Portland for this tier.
Also Consider
- Teardrop Lounge, Notable alternative
- Bible Club PDX, Notable alternative
- Multnomah Whiskey Library, Notable alternative
- Rum Club, Notable alternative
- Takibi, Notable alternative
How It Compares
Against Portland's more ambitious bar programs, Library Taphouse & Kitchen sits firmly in the accessible, value-oriented tier. Teardrop Lounge is the right call if you want a serious cocktail list in a considered room, the technical quality is higher, but so is the per-drink cost. Multnomah Whiskey Library requires membership planning and is a different category entirely: worth it for spirit depth, but a friction-heavy process compared to a walk-in taphouse visit.
Rum Club and Bible Club PDX both lean harder into atmosphere and craft cocktail identity, which makes them better picks for a date night or a special occasion round. For a group that wants beer, food, and no booking headache, Library Taphouse & Kitchen is easier to execute than any of those options. Takibi occupies a different lane, Japanese whisky focus with a design-forward room, and is worth the detour if that's your category, but it's not a direct substitute for a taphouse session.
If you're weighing Portland against other US bar destinations, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, Jewel of the South in New Orleans, and Julep in Houston each represent what a destination-level bar program looks like in their respective cities. Library Taphouse & Kitchen doesn't compete at that level, but it doesn't need to. It competes on convenience and value, and within that frame it's a solid, repeatable choice for SW Portland locals.
Explore Portland
Save or rate Library Taphouse & Kitchen on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
