
SUV Plows into Ridgewood Outdoor Dining Area: Concrete Barriers Prevent Potential Disaster
photos courtesy of Boyd Loving’s Facebook page
the staff of the Ridgewood blog
Ridgewood NJ, A late Monday morning crash in downtown Ridgewood sent one person to the hospital and served as a dramatic validation for local safety measures.
On Monday morning, June 1, 2026, an older model Ford Explorer veered off the roadway on Oak Street, crashing directly into the outdoor street-side dining area of the popular Park West Tavern.

Emergency responders from the Ridgewood Police Department Patrol Division, along with Ridgewood FD/EMS, arrived quickly at the scene to secure the area and investigate the cause of the mishap.
Concrete Barriers Credit with Preventing Tragedy
While the visual of a vehicle resting inside a dining area is alarming, a major disaster was narrowly avoided due to a mix of good timing and smart urban planning.
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No Diners Present: Fortunately, the street-side seating area was completely empty at the time of the late-morning collision.
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Perimeter Protection Work as Intended: Authorities noted that even if diners had been occupying the tables, large concrete blocks intentionally placed along the perimeter of the Park West Tavernâs outdoor space were positioned perfectly to absorb the impact and protect patrons.
Driver Hospitalized, First Responders Secure Scene
The driver of the Ford Explorer sustained injuries in the crash and was treated on-scene before being transported by ambulance to The Valley Hospital for further medical evaluation.
Ridgewood Professional Firefighters (FMBA Local 47) and EMS personnel remained on-site to manage the scene, checking the damaged SUV for volatile fluid leaks and assisting with transport logistics.
The exact cause of why the driver lost control of the vehicle remains under active investigation by the Ridgewood Police Department.
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Who wrote this puff piece?
“dramatic validation for local safety measures”
If people were sitting in the tables they would have been injured.
It’s clear in the picture.
Pre-Covid nobody would think sitting in the street to eat would make any sense.
AI wrote it, like the rest of the blog
Concrete barriers do not have the right of way. Sick of hearing that stupid lie.
No more “corrals.” Restaurant owners are stealing public space to have more tables for the same rent. Eating in the street made marginal sense during the covid era, which has ended. The whole idea should be scrapped, and probably will be when local business owners are off the council. Terrible conflict of interest.
Those concrete barricades were ok during Covid but are just a really bad accident waiting to happen. There was another bad accident a few years back. Why should restaurants have this massive amount of extra seating anyway? Can retailers get added space blocked off to expand their footprint? Can I bundle a few spaces and open up a hotdog stand? How are these spaces permitted? The establishments donât even have enough bathrooms for their regular occupancy.
Ridiculous
Thatâs why you donât eat in the streets. âRidgewood DOESNT workâđđđđ
Itâs only a matter of time until someone does get seriously hurt. But okay letâs eat in the middle of the streets that cars can barely fit down and forget about the buses. How stupid is our council??!?
If the large concrete blocks were not in the middle of the street would the driver have been injured. So much to unpack here. Is STREET dining really safe?
Exactly I can see if you shut the straight down on a Friday night Saturday night thatâs pretty cool. But Iâm not eating in the street with all the traffic passing me, kicking up dust and dirt on my food, and if the car is doing the speed limit of 25 miles an hour and they hit those blocks, the blocks are not screwed into the ground vacant slide. Who came up with that safety idea thatâs OK for a little fender benders cars moving around 10 miles an hour thatâs about it. No thanks Iâll eat inside.
Newsflash: No one cares where you eat.
A bit off the subject, but if a car is presumably traveling at less than 25 miles an hour and can lose control on a Village street, what about trucks traveling 55/65 MPH on Route 17 who might lose control and barrel into a NEW ball field (and our CHILDREN) at the Schedler property? This needs to be thought through.