海角精品黑料

Once a seasonal staple, Arlington bar crawls have gone MIA

This article was written by 海角精品黑料鈥檚 news partner and republished with permission.

It鈥檚 been more than a year since the last large, organized bar crawl in Arlington, and the former seasonal staple of the Orange Line corridor shows no sign of returning soon.

The last notable crawl to fill bars in the Clarendon area was the . The St. Patrick鈥檚 Day-themed pub crawl was one of three 鈥 including the and a Fourth of July-themed 鈥 to bring thousands of revelers to the watering holes along Wilson and Clarendon boulevards.

Though many local residents were not big fans of the bar crawls, which sometimes led to participants vomiting in front yards or , the events did generate local buzz and were reliable draws for Courthouse and Clarendon-area bars.

The free-wheeling nature of the bar crawls was curtailed a bit when the Arlington County Board targeted the events in 2014. While the crawls continued for more than 3 years after that, , a partner in some of the bars that participated in the events, tells ARLnow that the costs imposed by the regulations likely led to them petering out.

鈥淢y sense is that the regulations and costs made it impossible for it to be as profitable in Arlington as it is in D.C. for the operators,鈥 Parker said. 鈥淚 think the demand was still there, but the regulations made it too hard for them to turn a profit.鈥


SUBSCRIBE TODAY | Like this article? Read more by subscribing to today.


鈥淜ind of hurts because Arlington bars already have a competitive disadvantage to D.C. bars since we have to close an hour earlier, and must live by many other restrictions that they don鈥檛 have to in D.C.,鈥 Parker added.

, the primary organizer of the big Arlington bar crawls, is still holding similar crawls in D.C. and Baltimore 鈥 even using video from Clarendon to promote its in the District. The company did not respond to requests for comment.

Arlington County spokeswoman Susan Kalish says the county has chalked up the lack of bar crawls to declining popularity and is not reconsidering any of its policies, which call for event organizers to cover the cost of an added police presence and trash pickup.

鈥淎rlington County supports more than 250 special events a year,鈥 Kalish told ARLnow. 鈥淲e have seen a decline in pub crawls; however, there is always an ebb and flow in what鈥檚 popular.鈥

鈥淟ast year, we did have a pub crawl organizer complain about the cost for holding their event,鈥 she noted, adding that 鈥渢his does not appear to be a systemic complaint regarding our special events and there are no plans at the time to reconsider the policy.鈥

鈥淧ublic safety remains our top priority during all special events and resources are deployed to ensure the safety of participants, neighborhood residents and businesses,鈥 Kalish said.

Federal News Network Logo
Log in to your 海角精品黑料 account for notifications and alerts customized for you.