60cc Brewing reopens in Toledo with fresh beers and broader lineup
60cc Brewing is back in Reynolds Corners with new ownership, a fresher room, and launch beers like Sissy BAR double IPA and Calypso Cruiser pale ale.

60cc Brewing has reopened at 2113 N. Reynolds Road in Toledo’s Reynolds Corners neighborhood under new ownership, turning a brief shutdown into a full reset of the taproom and the lineup. The brewery closed on Jan. 24 and reopened on June 17, with a grand reopening celebration planned for July 1 at 4 p.m.
Keefe Snyder is steering the reboot, and the pitch is clear: keep the motorcycle-themed neighborhood pub people already know, but make it sharper, cleaner and more beer-forward. The closure was used for décor updates and brewing-equipment improvements, and the relaunch is built around 13 rotating draft lines that mix legacy 60cc brands with new concepts. For the opening push, the brewery is rolling out two new beers, Sissy BAR double IPA and Calypso Cruiser pale ale, which should keep hop drinkers paying attention even as the menu gets broader.

That broader lineup is where the reboot starts to look like a 2025 small-brewery playbook. Alongside traditional and modern beer styles, 60cc is leaning into house-made hard seltzer, hard iced tea, beer flights, non-alcoholic options and locally made snacks. The room itself is still being positioned as a casual gathering place, and the brewery has long described itself as kid- and dog-friendly, with 10 rotating taps plus a one-of-a-kind experimental tap. That mix points to a taproom trying to win on flexibility as much as on one-off releases.
The brewery’s backstory still gives the place its neighborhood credibility. Megan Perry and Mike Perry originally ran 60cc, and their brewing started as a hobby more than 10 years before the brewery opened on Reynolds Road. That homegrown origin helped make the brand feel less like a concept and more like a local hangout, which is exactly why the reopening matters in Reynolds Corners now.

What 60cc is trying here is bigger than bringing the lights back on. It is betting that the second life of a small brewery has to be more than a comeback story, with a tighter room, a wider beverage list and a clearer neighborhood identity all working at once.
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