Evolution of the Alturas
Renoโs oldest bar has found its sweet spot.
How do you keep a bar in business for more than a century?
Ask the folks at Alturas Bar at 1044 E. Fourth St. in Reno. Since it first opened at its original location on East Second Street in 1915, generations of bartenders have been pouring libations for loyal patrons. But thatโs not to say it hasnโt evolved โ it has, slightly.
Considered the oldest bar operating under the same name in Reno, Alturas, located on Fourth Street since 1948, has resisted much aesthetic change over the years. It underwent some remodeling when it was purchased by the current owner, Patrick (last name withheld by request), seven years ago, but the mission was to keep it as nostalgic as possible due to its deep-seated place in Renoโs history.
According to local historian Alicia Barber, who wrote about Alturasโ history on Renohistorical.org, the place was first opened by Al Franck in 1915 โโas a first-class saloon and cafรฉ with attached restaurantโ featuring live entertainment.โ
Prohibition violations cited by the Carson City federal court forced the bar to close in 1928, but it reopened in 1931 and was among the first establishments to apply for liquor licenses when Prohibition was repealed in โ33.
The Reno Hide and Fur Co. was the original occupant of Alturasโ current location on Fourth Street, which eventually morphed into a junk store, then Maytag Co. over the years, also offering apartment residences in the buildingโs second story.
Tunnels were built under Fourth Street during Prohibition, and a basement under Alturas became an underground venue for blues musicians in the โ70s and โ80s, hosting the likes of Jonny Lang and Buddy Guy, among other genre legends, over the decades.
Modern Metamorphosis
Ten people can sidle up to the bar at Alturas at once, around the clock, to sip on any of a large selection of fine whiskeys and other libations, shoot pool, or take their chances on the gaming machines that average a staggering $120,000 in payouts per month.
But what lies beneath this historic locale? Much.
A venue dubbed Cellar Stage was launched in Alturasโ basement in 2019, hosting heart-pumping musical acts, largely in the heavy-metal realm.
At the helm of Cellar is booking and production manager Dennis McDonald. When Alturasโ owner called on him to breathe new life into the barโs basement venue, McDonald took one look and said, โAre you freakinโ kidding me? Literally, what am I going to do with this?โ
Major renovations and cleaning were needed before he could bring in musicians. But thatโs exactly what happened. Dรฉcor heavy in black and silver tones, plus chains and skulls, made it an ideal venue for the local metal and punk scenes.
Tapping into his local music connections, McDonald started booking bands for the 170-person-capacity venue with a 10-inch stage that keeps those performing happily close to their fans.
McDonald says they practice music-based โgroup therapyโ at Cellar Stage. Itโs a small-scale setting that brings in local talent, plus some big names these days, such as Sponge, Agent Orange, Green Jellรฟ, and Anvil.
When nationally touring musicians began asking to play there, McDonald says, โI realized Iโve really got something special here.โ
In fact, the Cellar is so popular with musicians and fans that it already has gigs booked well into 2024. McDonald is even expanding its live music schedule to four nights a week.
At this bar known for hosting spontaneous 2 a.m. barbecues and welcoming people from every walk of life, McDonald says, โI wanted to keep that spur-of-the-moment, โyou never know what youโre going to see at the Alturasโ vibe.โ
He explains that itโs welcoming, but in the Cellar, it feels โ thrillingly โ like youโre somewhere you perhaps shouldnโt be.
Hodgepodge of Misfits
Today, while McDonald himself does everything from the production to the post-show cleaning for the Cellar, he says the venue and bar are happily comprised of a โhodgepodge of misfits,โ with music promoters John and Patty Staffieri often adding to the fun mix.
He takes a lot of pride in what theyโve accomplished as a team.
McDonald says there hasnโt been one negative incident since opening Cellar Stage, largely thanks to his Secret-Service-like security team, which keeps it safe and mellow while maintaining a zero-tolerance policy for acting up in the venue.
After facing a pandemic and other pressures upon opening, Cellar Stage at Alturas Bar is now a thriving, low-key, high-energy highlight to Renoโs music scene.
For details about Alturas Bar or Cellar Stage, find Alturas Bar on Facebook.
