Bartender Shane McGraw pours a $1 beer during the Reno Beer Crawl, a monthly event in which Ole Bridge Pub participates.
Bartender Shane McGraw pours a $1 beer during the Reno Beer Crawl, a monthly event in which Ole Bridge Pub participates.

When Ole Bridge Pub opened in 2009, it was among a rare breed of drinking establishmentsโ€”pouring an array of craft beers, some esoteric and otherwise elusive. Add in the charming location on the river, ground level of a fancy new condo tower, and Ole Bridge practically epitomized a budding downtown renaissance.

Reno in 2017 is a different place. Local breweries and craft beer bars aboundโ€”and, perhaps symbolically, the actual old bridge has been razed. (I just canโ€™t spell it โ€œole.โ€ It should have been olโ€™ or olde or just old, but โ€œoleโ€ makes me want to say it with Spanish flair, like Iโ€™m watching a bullfight.) In the new Reno, the Ole Bridge Pubโ€™s place seems a little less clear.

Iโ€™d planned to meet a friend after work, but a last-minute cancellation meant I was on my own, but there are worse ways to spend some time alone than contemplative drinking. The hours and list of beers on the barโ€™s website and Facebook page were outdated, but I hoped for the best. After a challenging hunt for parking, located blocks away thanks to special event street closures, I scuttled past Campo patio diners and into Ole Bridge.

During a recent remodel, the shuffleboard along the wall was replaced with padded seating and tables, but, after examining the digital tap list and chalkboard cocktail menu, I opted for a barstool. I could have gone outside, but occupying a whole picnic table overlooking the Truckee as a solo drinker would have felt gauche.

My first beverage choiceโ€”a new tart watermelon beer Iโ€™d been wanting to tryโ€”was a bust. The bartender said it had run out, but he hadnโ€™t removed it from the tap list yet. A different sour, raspberry instead, sufficed. The 16 drafts represented a nice cross-section of styles, including a couple of locals. If that wasnโ€™t enough, three cooler doors displayed the complete spectrum of bottles and cans, from recent IPAs to vintage barleywines. Uniquely, packaged beers are available to go at 20 percent off the onsite price (although looking at the menu, beer prices are absent, so ask first). Crowlers are an option for draft to go as well.

So craft beer is the focus, as the sign on Sierra Street promised. The house cocktails also spoke to meโ€”drinks distinct enough to need description, but that wouldnโ€™t stand out at a specialty cocktail bar. Neither beer geeks nor cocktail fanciers would be disappointed nor dazzled, although some top-shelf spirits are available beyond the grocery store brands. The curious twist now is the focus on soccer. The website identifies Ole Bridge as the official pub of American Outlawsโ€™ Reno chapter, passionate football supporters who gather here to support Team USA, and now Reno 1868 FC.

A somewhat slow but steady flow of random customers trickled in as I enjoyed my puckering beer and subsequent gin-and-ginger. I was pleasantly surprised how many craft beer drinkers there were, nobody looking for โ€œanything light.โ€ The bartender didnโ€™t seem bothered to interrupt sports chat with a friend to serve them, but I imagined the traditional wiping down of the bar might have been a better use of his time, as I had to peeled the menu from it.

Perhaps Ole Bridge, like the old bridge, had to be symbolically torn down to be partially reborn. Still craft beer focused but in this larger marketplace, itโ€™s now also for soccer fans, cocktail drinkers and various downtown passersby.

Marc Tiar has lived in Reno for most of his life. He is a semi-retired librarian, a family man and an occasional freelance writer. While practicing his beer geekiness, he enjoys home brewing, beer judging,...

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