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Bethesda’s Norfolk Avenue ‘streetery’ appears here to stay, and may get better

A popular streetery created during the pandemic in Bethesda, Maryland, not only appears to be here to stay, it may get some improvements.

The Norfolk Avenue streetery, which has turned two blocks of the street into an open eatery and seating area with just a few small tables and folding chairs, may be raised up to sidewalk level, have the intersections nearby raised to slow down traffic and be enhanced to deal with standing water issues.
The Bethesda streetery and the street it occupies. (Courtesy Montgomery County Department of Transportation)

Montgomery County’s Department of Transportation has a public meeting on that plan Wednesday night.

“I think it’s a great idea,” Daniel Babcock told WTOP. “I walk through a lot with my dogs so I’m always out and about in the neighborhood.”

Alfred Delena, who works nearby, said that “people seem to like it, it seems to bring people out.”

You can take a look at the plans to improve the streetery on the county’s website.

In a new release, the county said the goal of the future improvements would be “to enhance the streetscape and the existing streetery while permitting the safe movement of pedestrians and bicyclists through the space, loading and unloading needs for local businesses, as well as considerations for vehicular traffic.”

Streeteries on Newell Street in Silver Spring and on Woodmont Avenue in Bethesda are shutting down.

Historical marker in Wheaton honors Elsie and Romeo Horad. Theirs is one of many ‘untold stories’

[connatix_element_embed script_id=a3a4974b2a2b4cbdb2973bbcc1b204b3 player_id=017c7a1c-d539-4b52-8914-7f990221b730 video_id=845f524e-ca0c-4b26-a340-bb8915f2c4c8 align=right] On Thursday, the Montgomery County Planning Department unveiled a new historical marker at Wheaton Veterans Park honoring civil rights leaders Elsie S. Horad and Romeo W. Horad Sr.
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