Craft distillery environmental monitoring gives distillery owners and production managers the continuous data they need to understand what their facility is doing to their batches, replicate successful aging conditions, and catch safety and ventilation problems before they affect production or staff. Most small distilleries have no systematic way to track what's happening rack by rack throughout the aging process. Nosy puts wireless sensors at every barrel rack and throughout production areas, tracking temperature, humidity, CO2, atmospheric pressure, and tVOC every five minutes, with automated monthly reports that include local weather context.

For Craft Distilleries

Your Barrel Room Has a Climate. Do You Know What It's Actually Doing?

Great spirits aren't just made. They're shaped by hundreds or even thousands of temperature swings, humidity shifts, and pressure changes working on wood and liquid over months or years. You already know this. The question is whether you have systematic data on what your specific facility is actually doing to your specific batches, or whether you're still relying on intuition, periodic sampling, and hope. Being wrong can impact your top and bottom line.

Get Early Access → Download the Guide
Barrel Room — Live Rack Data
Rack A1
74°FTemp
58%RH
Rack A2
64°FTemp
62%RH
Rack B1
61°FTemp
71%RH
Still Room
1,240CO2 ppm
RisingtVOC
Simulated data for illustration. Updates every 5 min in production.

Trusted by craft distillery owners and production managers across the U.S.

The Challenge With Small-Scale Production

You know the variables that matter: thermal cycling drives extraction, humidity determines proof drift, pressure dynamics influence how spirit moves through wood. The challenge isn't understanding the theory. It's that measuring these things systematically, across every rack, every day, has never been practical at small-production scale. Until now.

Without that data, a few things stay harder than they need to be. Knowing when a batch is ready means pulling samples. Replicating a great batch means relying on memory rather than documented conditions. Planning around seasonal deadlines requires more art than science. And if something goes wrong, there's rarely a clear environmental record to point to.

There's also a ventilation and production efficiency dimension that often gets less attention. Fermentation and distillation generate CO2 and ethanol vapors that build up gradually in enclosed production spaces, affecting air quality and worker comfort. Poorly insulated areas raise heating costs. And HVAC systems rarely get evaluated based on what they actually deliver to the people and products inside — because until now, that data wasn't being collected.

To see how affordable continuous monitoring fits into a broader building improvement strategy, see What Is Fractional BAS?

Every Rack. Every Parameter. Every Five Minutes.

Monitor Every Rack, Not Just the Room

A single thermometer on the wall tells you the average, not the reality. Barrel rooms have gradients: the rack near the loading door, the top tier versus the floor, the corner that gets afternoon sun. Nosy can put sensors near every rack so you know what each section of your aging environment is actually experiencing, not just what the corner sensor says.

Build a Record That Makes Batches More Reproducible

Every five minutes, sensors across your facility are recording what your environment is doing. When a batch turns out well, you can go back and look at the complete environmental history for that rack during the aging period (temperature cycles, humidity, atmospheric pressure) and have something concrete to work from the next time. The craft will always involve judgment, but judgment informed by data beats judgment alone.

Catch Ventilation, Leaks, and Comfort Problems

CO2 and IAQ/tVOC monitoring gives you continuous visibility across production areas, still rooms, and barrel storage. At our Rhode Island pilot site, Nosy identified that ventilation in the still room needs improvement when the still is in operation — a finding with clear ventilation efficiency and comfort implications. The same deployment revealed significant evidence of poor insulation and uncomfortable temperatures in office areas, giving the owner a documented case for HVAC improvements.

What You'll See

Nosy monitors the parameters that matter most in a craft distillery:

🌡️

Temperature

The primary aging driver. Nosy tracks continuous temperature at each rack location, giving you daily min/max ranges, cycle counts, and long-term trend data. You can see which racks are running warm, which are getting the most thermal cycling, and how your facility's seasonal rhythm plays out.

💧

Humidity

Controls evaporation dynamics. Nosy tracks humidity at each rack location so you can see how conditions vary across the floor and across seasons, and have the data to support whatever humidity management decisions fit your operation.

🌫️

Atmospheric Pressure

Affects how spirit moves through the barrel. Nosy records barometric pressure continuously alongside other parameters, giving you the full environmental picture for each aging location.

☁️

CO₂ and IAQ/tVOC

Cover ventilation effectiveness and production environment monitoring. CO2 tracking in fermentation and still areas shows when ventilation is keeping pace with production activity. tVOC sensors across production and storage areas round out the air quality picture.

🌄

Local Weather Conditions

Pulled in automatically and incorporated into Nosy's monthly reports. This gives you the outside context you need to understand what's driving inside conditions. Whether a humidity spike, a temperature drop, or a pressure shift originates with your HVAC system or with the weather outside, you'll be able to tell.

Every month, Nosy generates an automated report that shows which areas had persistent issues, which had intermittent problems, and how trends look over time, all backed up by detailed data.

80% lower Total Cost of Ownership vs. traditional industrial monitoring systems
<5 min per sensor to install, no tools or contractors
2,000+ unique measurements per sensor per day
Every Rack plus the full facility — aging room, production areas, offices, storage

21 Sensors. A Rhode Island Craft Distillery.

At a craft distillery in Rhode Island, Nosy is deployed with 21 sensors covering barrel racks throughout the aging room as well as production and office areas of the facility. The owner has a technical background and came to Nosy with a specific goal: build a data-driven foundation for improving batch consistency and aging predictability.

Each barrel rack has its own sensor, capturing what that specific location experiences over time. With data recording every five minutes, the environmental history of each batch accumulates automatically, ready to be correlated with tasting notes and quality assessments as batches mature.

Beyond aging quality, the monitoring has already surfaced practical findings. Ventilation in the still room needs improvement when the still is operating. Nosy's CO2 and tVOC data made the pattern clear. The office areas showed persistent evidence of poor insulation and uncomfortable temperatures, giving the owner a documented case for HVAC improvements. These are the kinds of findings that would otherwise stay invisible or rely on staff complaints alone to surface.

We are working directly with the distillery owner to create custom reports with the actionable insights that will help improve their products and their bottom line.

21 sensors covering barrel racks, production, and office areas
5 min data recording interval — complete environmental history per batch
Month 1 when still room ventilation issue was identified and documented

Related Articles

Our craft distillery resource library covers barrel aging environment science, humidity management, ventilation monitoring, and environmental control strategy. Here are the most relevant published articles:

Common Questions from Distillery Owners

Nosy sensors can be mounted using adhesive strips on or near barrel racks, walls, or structural supports. Each one connects and configures automatically. No tools, no contractors, no drilling. A typical barrel room can be fully instrumented in a few hours.
Each sensor tracks temperature, relative humidity, CO2, IAQ/tVOC (Indoor Air Quality / total volatile organic compounds), atmospheric pressure, ambient light intensity, and simple occupancy. Each sensor generates over 2,000 unique measurements per day. Monthly reports also incorporate local weather conditions, so you can see the relationship between what's happening outside and what your facility is doing inside.
That's one of the core use cases. Nosy records environmental conditions continuously from every rack location. When a batch performs well, you can review the complete environmental history for that rack during the aging period, including temperature cycles, humidity levels, and atmospheric pressure. That record becomes the foundation for intentionally recreating those conditions with future batches. No amount of data replaces the art, skill, and experience that makes great spirits, but having a clear environmental record gives you something solid to build on.
CO2 is monitored directly. tVOC monitoring captures a broad range of volatile organic compounds, which includes ethanol vapors. Neither is a dedicated alarm-based leak detection system, but both provide continuous visibility into air quality levels that would indicate accumulation building in enclosed production spaces.
A standalone logger gives you one point of data. Nosy covers the whole facility, monitors seven parameters continuously at each location plus CO2, and connects everything into a single dashboard with floorplan visualization and automated monthly reports that include local weather context. You can see the entire facility at once, compare rack to rack, and track changes over time without manual data collection.
A full BAS typically costs $2.50 to $7 per square foot to install and requires specialized contractors and ongoing technical support. Nosy's Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) is up to 80% lower, and it's designed for operators without dedicated technical staff. See Fractional BAS vs. Full BAS: What's the Difference?
Almost immediately after setup, typically within a week or less. Floorplan heatmaps and trend views populate as data accumulates over the first days and weeks. Monthly automated reports begin after the first full month of data collection.

Ready to Stop Guessing and Start Knowing?

Build the data foundation your batches deserve.

Get Early Access → Download the Guide