Key West Parade to Bring Rolling Street Closures Downtown Saturday
Mojito's March Parade sent rolling street closures through downtown Key West on Saturday, kicking off at noon from the Historic Seaport.

Downtown Key West streets rolled to a temporary halt Saturday as Mojito's March Parade moved through the historic district, with closures beginning at noon from the starting point at Conch Republic Seafood Company on Greene Street at the Historic Seaport.
The rolling closures were an expected fixture of the midday event, with traffic blocked progressively as the parade advanced through downtown blocks. Conch Republic Seafood Company overlooks the seaport and marina in the heart of historic downtown Key West, placing the parade's launch point squarely in one of the island's most trafficked areas on a Saturday afternoon.
The format of rolling closures, common for Key West parades, meant streets reopened behind the procession as it moved forward rather than remaining shut for the duration of the event. Drivers and pedestrians in the vicinity of the Historic Seaport faced the most immediate disruptions near the noon start.

Key West's downtown corridor regularly absorbs parade traffic during the island's packed festival calendar, though a Saturday noon start on a March weekend placed Mojito's March among the higher-traffic windows of the year. The Conch Republic Seafood Company building, formerly known as the Singleton Fish House and Ice Plant, sits on the same waterfront where local shrimpers once unloaded and processed thousands of pounds of Key West Pink Shrimp. Its Greene Street location anchors the southeastern edge of the Seaport district, a natural staging ground for processions heading into the broader downtown grid.
No injuries or major disruptions were reported in connection with the event.
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