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Capital One Arena bars dealt one-two punch with sports cancellations, new safety orders

With the suspensions of the NHL and NBA seasons, bars and restaurants near Capital One Arena and across the District are forcing to shutter due to concerns of spreading the novel coronavirus.

One top of that, the District issued new restrictions on bars Sunday, leaving some with no other option but to temporarily close.

Curt Large, owner of six D.C.-area establishments, opted to shut down all of his businesses, including Rocket Bar on 7th Street NW, which heavily relies on traffic from Washington Capitals and Wizards games.

“If you look at what we average in March and April and compare that to June and August when there are no games, we do almost double the business in those months,” Large said in an interview. “That’s not the impact of people not going out on Friday and Saturday nights. That’s the impact of Capital One.”

Mayor Muriel Bowser issued new guidelines for licensed restaurants and taverns in the District that prohibit gatherings of 250 people, suspend the use of bar seating…

Read the full story from the Washington Business Journal.

Sonic Drive-In to open its first restaurant in Northern Virginia’s I-95 corridor

Fast-food chain Sonic Drive-In has filed plans to build a new restaurant in Prince William County, its first outpost along the Interstate 95 corridor in Northern Virginia. The 1,400-square-foot restaurant, with two drive-thru lanes, 12 pull-up ordering stalls and a dining patio, will be located at 4115 Talon Drive in Dumfries, part of the Barracks Row at Quantico commercial development less than a mile northwest of the I-95 interchange at state Route 234. The location “will constitute a flagship Sonic design that will serve as a benchmark for future restaurant drive-thru development,” according to a written narrative accompanying the application, filed by Noah Klein of Venable LLP.
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