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Bill Lytle breaks up concrete in Stroh Alley in Sunbury.
Liz Rohde/The Daily Item /


Bill Lytle breaks up concrete in Stroh Alley in Sunbury.
/


Published September 05, 2009 07:17 am - Business owners in the 400 block of Market Street are pleased to see the city making improvements to the Edison Plaza and Stroh Alley.

Stroh Alley: Looking better every day
Shop owners happy with changes

By Amanda O’Rourke
The Daily Item

SUNBURY

Business owners in the 400 block of Market Street are pleased to see the city making improvements to the Edison Plaza and Stroh Alley.

At least one business owner hopes the improvements, including increased lighting and a video surveillance system, will prevent crime in the previously darkened alleyway.

“The more light, you’re going to hold down all the riffraff, people who like to do bad things at night,” said Ken Romberger, owner of the Jasmine-Aire Boutique. “They don’t want to come around so often.”

When the project was first brought to the table about four years ago, city officials expressed concern about opening up the covered alley, and accordingly recently removed the awning that used to cover Stroh Alley in an effort to prevent crime.

Beyond that, the project is aimed at making the area look nicer.

“I’m thrilled and happy that there’s so many different improvements coming,” Romberger said. “It’s keeping our town on the map. When people go through it and there are improvements, it just helps in the long run for everybody here.”

It was on Wednesday the City Council approved several contracts to continue work on the Market Street project.

Those contracts will be with Central Builders, of Sunbury, concrete, at $77 per yard; Spring City Lighting, of Spring City, Pa., street lights, at $17,934 for LED lights or $14,850 for CFL; and Keystone Communications, video surveillance system, at $2,945.

Work began last week to demolish the old concrete running through Stroh Alley in preparation for laying a decorative, stamped concrete walkway.

Other plans to improve Stroh Alley include new lighting, plantings, decorative arches at the alley’s exits onto Market Street and Woodlawn Avenue and a video surveillance system.

The city is using $93,960 in federal stimulus money for the work. The money has been funneled through the Community Development Block Grant program.

“It’s beautiful,” BPM Hobby Store owner Bruce Sisino said of the work the city already has completed on the Market Street side of the Edison Plaza.

Work under way now on the parking lot is the second and final phase to work that began there in 2006.

The earlier landscaping project, designed by Dogwood Hill Nursery and Landscaping, of Sunbury, brought vegetation and a wrought-iron arch to the area to act as a buffer between the street and the parking lot.

The city also plans to remove the parking lot’s existing meters and install a single parking meter machine.



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