The Tipsy Crow in downtown San Diego's Gaslamp Quarter operates out of the 1874 Spencer-Ogden Building at Fifth Avenue and F Street — the oldest structure in the district to be continuously held by the same family. The Main Bar on the middle level has served drinks since before Prohibition and now runs the Drink Exchange, a stock-market-style pricing system where cocktail costs fluctuate on digital boards every five minutes, an interactive format without parallel among Gaslamp neighbors like Prohibition Lounge. Upstairs, The Nest occupies the former fireworks storage room that detonated in an 1887 explosion, now rebuilt as a lounge with a green marble bar, fireplaces, and pool tables. The Underground hosts live bands, DJs, and comedy acts on a private stage framed by original brick walls still bearing German-language slogans — a subterranean performance space that runs on a different register than the open-air game-bar energy at Star Bar across the Gaslamp. The most complex event configuration spans all three levels — Main, Nest, and Underground — for a full-building buyout that layers cocktail service, live entertainment, and bar games across the entire 1874 footprint.