What is the future for this condemned building in Ocean City, NJ?
Voted one of New Jersey's most beautiful islands, Ocean City is one of the most popular shore towns in South Jersey. Each summer, you can expect over 100,000 people to be in Ocean City between Memorial Day and Labor Day.
However, for the 2024 summer season, one of the most beautiful islands had a massive eye sore for visitors.
When you use Garden State Parkway Exit 25 and drive down Roosevelt Boulevard, you enter the south end of the island at 34th Street. At the light where 34th Street meets Bay Avenue, to your right is the ACME Supermarket, but to your left is an abandoned property.
What Is This Condemned Property In Ocean City?
The Seaspray Hotel first opened in 1960 and was converted into Seaspray Condominium in 1980. The two-level property with a pool has been home to vacationers and year-round residents for decades.
The property has had a chain-link fence surrounding the building for the last several months and features red signs on the apartment doors saying “unsafe for human occupancy.”
The Seaspray Condos was shut down by Ocean City officials after concrete fell through an exterior doorway on the north end of the property on April 17th. The complex has been the subject of ongoing litigation after competing engineers have conflicting reports about the condition of the 45-year-old building.
Now all of the condo owners and renters at the Seaspray have been forced out after Ocean City construction official Neil Byrne on May 8th deemed the building “unsafe due to continued deterioration of the structural elements.”
What Is Next For The Seaspray Condominium?
The property is currently listed on the Sabal Real Estate website on sale for $7 million. Here is their description of the currently shuttered Seaspray Condo:
Prime Real Estate, Redevelopment Opportunity. Existing building consists of 32 condo units. Located just off of The Garden State Parkway in desirable Ocean City, NJ. Corner 34th and Bay Ave.
Potential buyers who may be interested are encouraged to contact the realtor "to obtain more information." Conveniently, nothing about the building being deemed "unsafe" or the ominous chain-link fence around the property is mentioned on the real estate website listing.
Safe to assume this building, which has been labeled "unsafe" by multiple people, will likely be demolished by the next owner. This will pave the way for a new property to take its place. The premiere location leads most people to believe the next building will be the home to a more upscale resort property to attract new clientele to the island.
Here's What Makes Ocean City So Special
Gallery Credit: Eddie Davis