Serving Northern Nevada and the Eastern Sierra
Every dollar spent at a local business is a greater return to the community, creating jobs and increasing spending. In the business world, this concept is known as the “multiplier effect.” Reno Public Radio’s news team profiles five small businesses changing the local economy and culture in Northern Nevada.

The Changing Face Of Reno's Downtown And Its Small Business Community

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Neal Cobb

As Reno has changed over the decades, so have the small businesses that set up shop here. No one knows this better than local historian Alicia Barber. 

She describes a downtown Reno of the '40s and '50s where locals and tourists alike would come to shop, catch a show and patronize the small businesses. But in the '70s that began to change. The forces of suburbanization coupled with the rise of large casinos pushed out smaller businesses from the downtown core. Now, as neighborhoods like MidTown, the Riverwalk and 4th Street are being revitalized, Barber says we should use history as a guide and encourage small businesses to move back into the center of town.

West and 2nd Street present day
Credit Alexa Ard

Listen to Reno Public Radio's Will Stone interview historian Alicia Barber. She wrote the book "Reno's Big Gamble" and authored the Reno mobile historical app. She's also part of anew projectlooking at the history of 4th Street and Prater Way.

  

A view of North Virginia Street during 1940s
Credit University of Nevada, Reno Special Collections
Present day downtown Reno
Credit Alexa Ard / KUNR
Looking south on Virginia Street during the 1940s
Credit University of Nevada, Reno Special Collections
Credit University of Nevada, Reno Special Collections

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Will Stone is a former reporter at KUNR Public Radio.