PLEASANTVILLE, N.J. - This down-on-its-luck stepsister
town to neighboring Atlantic City has struggled economically for decades,
languishing without a redevelopment plan or the ability to attract private
investment.
But a $38 million project that includes two apartment
buildings and retail space on a vacant Main Street block is expected to set the
cornerstone for economic growth and expanded development in the Atlantic County
city, according to Jacqueline Amado-Belton, economic development director for
the City of Pleasantville.
"We feel like we have borne the brunt of a lot of
issues that have spilled over from Atlantic City over the years,"
Amado-Belton said. "In terms of perception and other factors, it's been a
struggle and a challenge to get to this point."
The Pleasantville City Center, expected to be completed
by next summer, will add 135 apartments and 18,000 square feet of retail space
and will be bordered by Main Street, Washington Avenue, Milan Avenue, and South
Second Street.
Hurricane Sandy victims will have first crack at rental
units, the majority of which will be priced so they are affordable to
households whose incomes are 60 percent or less of the area's median income,
officials said.
It is unclear what the prices of the one-, two-, and
three-bedroom units will be when they are offered to the public, or precisely
how many actually will be rented by Sandy victims.
Although construction began on the site several months
ago, an official groundbreaking was held last week after the developer, RPM
Development Group of Montclair, obtained the final phase of private financing
for the project, officials said.
"This project is really pivotal for setting the tone
for Pleasantville," Mayor Jesse Tweedle said. "It's something that
has been in the works for years."
Situated in southeastern Atlantic County, Pleasantville,
with a population of about 20,000, was once a thriving village of whalers and
shellfishers that prospered because of its location as a gateway to Atlantic
City. Its cemeteries stand as monuments to that prosperity, harboring elaborate
- but weed-choked - grave markers and mausoleums that bear the names of locally
renowned captains and boatmen like the Risleys, Smiths, and Lakes.
By the early 20th century, Main Street was lined with
stores, banks, schools, and other public institutions, and the advent of
regional train service, trolleys, and eventually buses created a regional
passenger transit hub that continues to this day.
But the prosperity didn't last. And the town's economic
decline followed that of many urban and suburban communities as transit
patterns drastically changed in the years after World War II. Transit
passengers became automobile drivers, bypassing places like Pleasantville on
superhighways like the Atlantic City Expressway and the Garden State Parkway.
And with that trend, Pleasantville's downtown began a
downward spiral as shoppers fled to malls and strip shopping centers.
But with more than 500 residents working in Atlantic City
- although the numbers are dwindling because of the recent casino closures -
and NJ Transit retaining Pleasantville as a regional transportation post, the
concept of the city as a hub has remained, according to Kevin Kavanaugh, vice
president of development for RPM.
"Pleasantville is a bus-based, transit-oriented place,
so our mission was to create a transit- and pedestrian-friendly urban
center," Kavanaugh said. "We think what this project will do is boost
the foot traffic in an already walkable shopping district."
Besides private financing, the project is being underwritten
by $7.3 million in Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery money
through the Fund for Restoration of Multifamily Housing. The program provides
for-profit and nonprofit housing developers an opportunity to secure
zero-interest and low-interest loans to finance the development of affordable
housing in the state's nine counties most affected by Hurricane Sandy.
The New Jersey Housing and Mortgage Finance Agency also
provided a total of $3.75 million in permanent financing for the first and
second phases of the project, and awarded the project competitive 9 percent
federal low-income housing tax credits, which will generate about $25 million
in private equity.
"This project is illustrative of collective efforts
to bring back to the Pleasantville community, Atlantic County, and our state
what was lost during the worst natural disaster in New Jersey history,"
state Department of Community Affairs Deputy Commissioner Melissa Orsen said.
Orsen said New Jersey's rental housing stock "took a
serious body blow from Sandy" losing more than 15,000 rental units to
major damage or destruction.
"As such, DCA is pleased to be able to use Sandy
recovery funds to support worthwhile housing projects statewide such as
Pleasantville City Center that help replenish the supply of affordable housing
units that were destroyed or damaged by the storm."
Source: Philly.com
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