Coe-Brews

The sole establishment of alchemical pursuit for the village of Coba-Coba.

Purpose / Function

The building is the home, workshop, and bussiness front of the owner. Aside from pursuing the alchemists own research, this establishment is most often selling healing potions to workers injured by accident or other means of injury. It is rare that this place gets orders for anything specific in cosistent or great quantities, and as such keeps limited reagents on hand. Specialized and specific orders will require several days for the alchemist to source and synthesize the desired substance.

Architecture

While made of logs like most other buildings in Coba-Coba, this building is sealed with a natural resin which results in a better sealed interior regarding pests, drafts, and rate of wear on the buildings joints and seams by the elements. Unlike most other buildings in the town, this one has a roof of cracked clay tiles that are sealed and held in place by the same resin used on the seams of the walls of the building. Blobs of resin the roof and its tiles, telling of a long history of routine repairs and patches. The buildings outskirts feature a simple fence made of notched posts leaning upon one another in a manner such as to declare property lines rather than be remotely capable of keeping anything in or out. The front yard is scattered with various stones that may have once lined the path leading to the front entry, but now are strewn about as if deliberatley kicked aside. The back yard contains an overgrown and dilapitaded green house with more shattered glass panels than whole ones, as well as a trio of trellis archways all covered in wide varieties of plantlife not seen in the surrounding areas. The door is made of hardwood panels lashed together with plant fibers and hung on wrought iron half pin hinges. On entry, the first room is a spartan living space with several mismatched wooden dressers aranged in a semi circle on a far wall with a handful of healing potions on them. A hide rug adorns the center of the floor. The wall opposite the dressers has a bed and nightstand with an oil lamp on it. At the foot of the bed if a heavy chest with a large lock, and just a little away from it is a trap door leading into the basement/workshop. The door to the basement is nothing more than a woven reed mat laid over the opening in the floor. The stairs are eathenwork and shorn up by wooden planks along the face of each stair to prevent rapid breakdown under traffic. The basement itself is a tangled mess of alchemy tools, notes, and other detritus.
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