GRAND RAPIDS, MI — After more than 13 years in business, The Hideout Brewing Company has closed.

The brewery, 3113 Plaza Drive NE, served its last glass of beer on Sunday, March 17, and was offering $10 growlers of its remaining supply Monday afternoon.

Nick Humphrey, who has co-owned Hideout since 2012, said working in the beer industry has been an “amazing” experience but that he and his business partner “kind of had a bit of a falling out so we’re just moving on.”

“The regulars became like family, and the memories we’re going to have from here are really touching,” said Humphrey, 37, of Rockford. Efforts to sell the brewery, underway since June, were unsuccessful.

Humphrey said The Hideout was opened around 2005 by Ken and Laura McPhail. Humphrey and Scott Colson bought the brewery in 2012, after which they expanded. They took over additional space at 3113 Plaza Drive that was formerly occupied by Hubba Tubba, a hot tub rental business.

The brewery was known for its tucked-away location, just north of I-96 and east of Plainfield Avenue, and for its outlandish flavors, such as Double Bubble Double IPA and Green Apple Jolly Rancher Wit. Its most popular beers were Gangster IPA, Chocolate Peanut Butter Stout and Smuggler’s Hazelnut Stout, Humphrey said.

“We loved doing wild and crazy flavors that nobody else was doing with beer,” he said.

In addition to its Grand Rapids brewery, Hideout sold its beer at locations throughout the state, Humphrey said. He did not immediately have figures on how much beer his company brewed on an annual basis.

Coupled with the falling out with his business partner, competition from other breweries also played a role in the decision to close Hideout, Humphrey said.

“When we opened we were the closest brewery for a big radius,” he said. “Competition certainly played a factor.”

Humphrey said he had tried to sell his business to a “number of buyers since June,” but the sale did not materialize.

“We had finalized all of the details with a buyer but they were unable to get rights to the building,” he said in a message posted on Hideout’s Facebook page.