City of Reno
Home MenuDownload Community Apps
Reno Building Inspection App (iOS, Android)
The new Reno Building Inspections mobile app, released in February 2018, allows contractors and homeowners to request inspections on their active Reno permits with just a few clicks.
Through the app, you can:
- Quickly schedule multiple inspections of an active permit without a log-in.
- Cancel or reschedule an inspection.
- Use your smartphone to view all your Reno building and fire permits, inspection results, and inspection history
- Easily view your permits by adding them to MyList.
Reno Municipal Court App (iOS, Android)
Access the Reno Municipal Court via the app. You can contact us via email, chat, or by phone. Make a payment, request a new court date, find information about your case, find your Zoom hearing information, request copies of past records, access court forms from your mobile device. In addition, you can link right to the website through the court app.
PulsePoint App (iOS, Android)
The free mobile app alerts citizens trained in hands-only cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) when someone in a nearby public place suffers sudden cardiac arrest. Public safety communications centers send alerts through the app at the same time they dispatch first responders to the scene. The app also notifies users of the closest available automated external defibrillator (AED).
Once the app is installed, select the agency (in this case “Reno Fire”) serving the area where you live or work to receive alerts. Users may follow more than one agency.
Citizens can also download the PulsePoint AED app and use it to report AEDs in the Reno community.
Reno Historical App (iOS, Android)
Developed by the Special Collections Department at the University of Nevada-Reno Library, Reno Historical is a mobile application that provides an interpretive view of the city’s history. Search for interesting people, places, and events in Reno history and enjoy curated tours of the city. Each point on the interactive GPS-enabled map includes historical information about the site, with historic images from Special Collections, the Nevada Historical Society, and other top historical collections. Many sites also include audio clips and short documentary videos based on the University of Nevada Oral History Program’s collection of interviews.