Pipes, 59, built his business for the small slice of tried and true puck heads in town, many who had moved here from regions with N.H.L. traditions — New York or Boston, for example.
Business was catching on when, late on a March evening in 2016, a gas leak turned into a massive explosion that leveled several businesses across the street from the Angry Beaver.
Nobody was hurt inside the bar that night, but the interior looked like a hurricane had whipped through it.
Pipes boarded up the building for a while and readied for a comeback.
A few weeks later, thieves struck in the predawn darkness, carting away priceless memorabilia and trashing the place anew.
Pipes could have walked away then, leaving behind his dreams and hundreds of beloved customers. But he trudged on. When the N.H.L. announced in 2018 Seattle would get a new franchise, that seemed like a brilliant decision.
“After all those years of struggle, I was finally ready to have that real breakthrough,” Pipes said.
Then came the pandemic. The bar bore the same brunt felt by small businesses across the country. On government orders, it shut down. Then it opened at partial capacity. Pipes tried to pivot. He turned his bar into a takeout restaurant. When that failed, he shut down again.