Historic Apothecaries Hall Finds New Life As Never Enough, Fortitude Valley’s Latest Late-Night Destination

Did you know that the former Apothecaries Hall in Fortitude Valley is now home to Never Enough, a vinyl-driven, late-night wine bar and restaurant breathing new life into one of the Valley’s oldest surviving commercial buildings?


Read: The Crowbar Team Brings Fine Dining to Fortitude Valley’s Heritage Hall


Tucked into 690 Ann Street, the two-storey face-brick building has quietly anchored its stretch of the street for well over a century. Most revellers heading toward Brunswick Street Mall tend to walk straight past it, but the building has a presence that rewards a second look and now, a very good reason to stop in.

Apothecaries Hall
Photo credit: Instagram/Never Enough

Behind the venue are Tyla Dombroski and Trad Nathan, the duo who also own Crowbar (formerly The Zoo), the iconic live music venue whose first-floor windows look diagonally across Ann Street toward Apothecaries Hall. 

The pair share a landlord with their new venture, a circumstance that, by their own account, led directly to Never Enough coming to life. After being walked through the space, Dombroski was immediately won over by its heritage character and saw it as the right moment to bring their longstanding passion for food and wine into a venue of their own.

The Concept

Apothecaries Hall
Photo credit: Instagram/Never Enough

Never Enough is designed to be a flexible, come-as-you-are kind of place. Whether you’re after a couple of small plates and a glass of wine after work, or a long, leisurely dinner with a group, the format is built to accommodate it. 

Late nights are central to the offering, with the venue working to finalise an extended trading licence that would see food served until midnight, and DJs spinning vinyl upstairs until the early hours on Fridays and Saturdays, drawing from an in-house collection of around 300 records.

In the kitchen is chef Trent Lymn, formerly of The 203, whose menu draws on European traditions alongside South American influences picked up during travels with his Argentinian wife. Smaller dishes include piquillo peppers with anchovy, marjoram and olive oil; fried artichokes with white bean and salsa verde; and fried chicken tenders with white sturgeon caviar and crème fraîche. 

Photo credit: Instagram/Never Enough

More substantial options include Moreton Bay bug and prawn casarecce with tomato sugo, Murray cod in pil pil sauce with Yarra Valley roe, and a 21-day dry-aged cheeseburger with champagne onions and tarragon mustard. The menu will shift with the seasons.

On the drinks side, Mikey Pattison, previously of Alice and The Bowery among others, oversees a wine list that leans toward French and Australian producers, supported by a considered cocktail menu that reflects his considerable bar experience.

The space itself will be familiar to anyone who visited during its previous lives as The Apo or Uh Oh Spaghettio. Exposed brick, heavy timber, metal balustrades and polished concrete are all still present. Dombroski has worked to soften the room with pink and burgundy tones and considered lighting, making it feel as welcoming at 11pm as it does at midday.


Read: Rare Fortitude Valley Landholding in James Street Precinct Enters Market


Never Enough is open Wednesday to Thursday from 5pm, and Saturday to Sunday from midday.

About Apothecaries Hall

Photo credit: heritage.brisbane.qld.gov.au

The building’s story stretches back to the earliest days of Fortitude Valley as a commercial district. The former Apothecaries Hall on Ann Street functioned continuously as a pharmacy for about 40 years, with chemist Moses Ward operating at the premises from 1863 until 1875, after which James Henley Fitzgibbon continued the business as a dispensing and family chemist until the early 1900s. Both men were prominent figures in early Brisbane who helped define the pharmacy profession in Queensland, counting among the founders of the Pharmacy Society and Pharmacy Board, and advocating for the enactment of the Pharmacy Act 1884.

The current building was constructed in 1882 to a design by architect Alfred Hubbard, though the date on the façade reads 1862, a reference to the year Ward first opened for business on the site. It has been recognised as a local heritage place since 30 October 2000 and is regarded as one of the oldest intact commercial buildings in Fortitude Valley that still retains its original historic character.

Published 25-April-2026

The Crowbar Team Brings Fine Dining to Fortitude Valley’s Heritage Hall

The Crowbar team is trading the roar of live bands for the warm crackle of vinyl records, bringing their hospitality vision to one of Fortitude Valley’s most storied heritage buildings.



Never Enough, opening 29 March at the historic Apothecaries Hall on Ann Street, marks a significant expansion for Trad Nathan and Tyla Dombroski. The couple, who’ve built Brisbane’s reputation as a live music destination through Crowbar, established their broader hospitality venture—the Long Lunch Group—earlier this year, with this two-level venue as their opening statement.

The Apothecaries Hall itself carries more than a century of Valley history. The building, constructed in 1882 to a design by architect Alfred Hubbard, functioned as a pharmacy for roughly four decades. Moses Ward, an early Brisbane chemist and dentist, established his practice here from 1863, whilst later operator James Henley Fitzgibbon, and his daughter Mary Fitzgibbon—one of Queensland’s first female chemists—continued dispensing medicines from the same premises until the early 1900s. The building illustrates Fortitude Valley’s development as an important commercial and retail centre in the late nineteenth century.

What happens inside when Never Enough opens will be quite different from its pharmacy days, but the restaurant promises to honour the building’s character through thoughtful design and intentional hospitality.

The downstairs dining room will serve more refined plates, whilst the upstairs bar space focuses on lighter offerings—fresh seafood, charcuterie, and small plates designed to pair with the venue’s curated drinks selection. Both levels share a philosophy: food and drinks meant to linger over, rather than rush through.

Leading the culinary direction is Executive Chef Trent Lymn, most recently at The 203. Lymn’s menu emphasises seasonality and carefully aged proteins. He’s signalled some of the offerings: fried artichokes with white bean purée and ricotta salata, alongside indulgent fried chicken with crème fraîche and caviar. The kitchen will feature dry-aged lamb, beef and duck as backbone proteins, with late-night dry-aged burgers also planned for the menu.

The drinks program, spearheaded by General Manager Mikey Pattison, leans into a wine-focused approach. Guests can expect a curated wine list alongside fortified wines, aperitifs and amaros—selections crafted to complement both the kitchen’s output and the broader dining journey. It’s designed as a seamless transition from long lunch into late-night service, where a nightcap might turn into an evening.

What sets Never Enough apart from other dining venues is its sonic identity. The team is opening with 300 vinyl records, which will rotate throughout service on Audio Technica turntables. This approach reflects the founding team’s deep connection to music and creative culture. Friday and Saturday evenings will feature resident DJs, whilst other nights will showcase the curated collection.

“Never Enough is really about the things we love: food, drinks, music, art and being around people,” said Dombroski. “There are never enough of those moments, whether it’s another round, another dish on the table or just another hour spent with friends.”

Nathan and Dombroski have spent the past decade building venues across Brisbane and Sydney. The Long Lunch Group signals their expansion into food-forward hospitality at a time when Fortitude Valley’s dining scene continues to attract investment and talent. Their track record with Crowbar—now operating at the former Zoo site on Ann Street—demonstrates an ability to steward spaces that matter to the community.

The heritage building itself was designed with care. Dombroski worked alongside Kit Bettison from Alida & Miller on the spatial design, creating two distinct areas while maintaining visual and conceptual connection between the floors.

Kitchen hours will run until 11pm when the venue opens, with plans to extend later once licensing permits. The venue sits within Bakery Lane, a section of Ann Street that preserves a collection of heritage commercial buildings dating to the 1870s and 1880s, alongside the neighbouring Bragg’s Bakery building—itself heritage-listed and dating to 1885.



For Fortitude Valley residents and visitors, Never Enough represents another chapter in the Valley’s reinvention as a destination for carefully considered hospitality. The opening aligns with broader investment in the precinct, where heritage preservation and contemporary dining culture increasingly coexist.

The doors open 29 March 2026.

Published 17-March-2026