How a 135-Year-Old Factory Became Duluth's Most Beloved Wedding Venue
What does it mean to get married inside a building that helped construct the Golden Gate Bridge? There's something about holding the most personal day of your life inside walls that have held a century of stories — and that's exactly what Clyde Wedding & Event Center offers couples in the Duluth area. I've been working events here for years, and somehow it never gets old.
I sat down with Toni Giuliani, president of Clyde and one of my favorite humans in this industry (and yes, a former wedding client of mine — her wedding is still one of the most-asked-about events we've ever been a part of). Tony has essentially grown up inside these walls. She and her dad took over what was a shuttered industrial ironworks factory — built in 1889 — and turned it into one of the most distinctive event spaces in the region. Watching her talk about this place, you can feel how deeply personal it all is.
We covered everything from the history of the building to food trends, dessert philosophy, and how to think about venue flexibility when you're in the early stages of planning. If you've ever wondered what it's really like to work with Clyde — or if it might be the right fit for your wedding — this episode is for you.
Key Themes + Takeaways
Clyde's industrial roots are more than aesthetic — the original ironworks factory (est. 1889) helped build the Empire State Building, the Panama Canal, and the Golden Gate Bridge. That history is baked into every beam and reclaimed wood surface in the building.
The venue can host intimate gatherings of 30–40 people all the way up to 1,200 for a full building buyout — and Tony's team genuinely leans into the flexibility, not away from it.
The scratch kitchen makes all the difference. When your food is made in-house, dietary restrictions aren't a headache — they're just handled. And yes, the wood-fired pizza is real and it's as good as it sounds.
Tony's perspective on weddings mirrors mine: one well-chosen focal point can tie an entire event together. You don't have to do everything — you just have to do your thing.
Clyde is a family business, full stop. It's Tony and her dad, all in, every weekend. That level of personal investment shows up in every interaction — and couples can feel it.
Favorite Quotes from This Episode
"He saw the vision. I was 11 and I was like, what are you doing? But he saw it. And it worked."
"Everything that could have been reused was saved and reused for something else — and I feel like that just makes it more special."
"You can go way over the top and do all of the things, or you can keep it super simple and it still looks great. The space works well either way."
"The only person that should matter is the two of you. It's amazing how many other opinions factor in when, at the end of the day, if the couple isn't excited about their own wedding day — we need to start over."
"If you're flexible, we could do it next month. It's this 'if, then.' But don't assume it isn't ever an option."
Chapter Markers
0:00 Welcome to the Clyde
2:35 1889 and the world's largest cranes
4:07 Reclaimed wood and a rescued building
5:38 A tour of the spaces — all three floors of possibility
8:53 Small wedding, big space: debunking the myth
12:45 The food conversation (yes, we talk croutons)
14:15 Plated vs. buffet: the real answer
18:43 Inside the new bridal suite
22:25 Tony's favorite wedding memories
27:24 How to actually book Clyde
29:10 Family business, family heart
This week's reflection:
When you picture your wedding day, what's the one thing — the one detail, the one feeling, the one moment — that you keep coming back to? Start there. Let that be your true north for every decision that follows.
If you're dreaming about Clyde for your wedding or event, reach out to Tony's team directly. Email is always the easiest way to get started — just share your date, your guest count, and a little about what you're envisioning.
MB01MF8DXNLKUG3