OCEAN COUNTY – A major beach replenishment project that will take place across numerous shore towns is scheduled to begin in January, officials announced.
“I am pleased that after several contracting delays, this long-awaited project to restore our beaches that have suffered considerable erosion over the past years is finally moving forward,” said Rep. Chris Smith (R-4th).
In 2022, $30.2 million in federal funding from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act was secured to help critical beach replenishment for Jersey shore towns that have suffered serious beach erosion. Smith was one of just 13 Republicans who voted for the bill.
“We have never let up on securing this long-overdue, unjustly delayed project,” Smith said. “That we have at last received a schedule with real target dates on it gives us great confidence that the desperately needed beach replenishment will finally take place and better protect our beach towns.
“Our shore communities will benefit greatly from the federal assistance and partnership to address significant safety concerns from beach erosion and help blunt damaging effects of major storms,” Smith said.
The project had faced several setbacks and was in jeopardy due to lack of federal funds. Smith secured the entire federal share – or about half of the $73.5 million total cost – from the federal infrastructure bill passed by Congress.
In October, the Army Corps of Engineers awarded the contract to Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Company of Houston, TX.
The project consists of dredging and placing 2.1 million cubic yards of sand onto Ocean County beaches. The sand will be dredged from three separate approved borrow areas located offshore of the project area in the Atlantic Ocean.
Furthermore, the sand will be pumped onto the beach and graded into an engineered template, which is designed to reduce damage from coastal storm events, according to officials.
The contract details work to widen the beach in areas effected by erosion. Dunes, beach access paths/crossovers, and sand fencing will be repaired in some areas. In addition, dune grass will be planted in areas that undergo repairs.
“I am grateful for the expertise of the Army Corps of Engineers – our nation’s premier builders – for getting this project to the finish line,” Smith said, “as well as to their partners at the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, Ocean County and the municipalities.”
The tentative schedule (weather permitting) will involve the following six-to-seven-month construction estimate:
• Seaside Heights with taper into Seaside Park: work is estimated to take place in January and February and include 241,000 cubic yards of sand;
• Toms River (South): work is estimated to take place in February/March and include 426,000 cubic yards of sand;
• Lavallette: work is estimated to take place in March and include 184,000 cubic yards of sand;
• Bay Head with taper into Point Pleasant Beach: work is estimated to take place in spring and include 495,000 cubic yards of sand;
• Mantoloking: work is estimated to take place in spring and include 392,000 cubic yards of sand;
• Brick Township: work is estimated to take place in early summer and include 227,000 cubic yards of sand; and
• Toms River (North): work is estimated to take place in summer and include 135,000 cubic yards of sand.
The beach fill project was initially constructed between 2017 to 2019 and requires periodic “renourishment” to bring it back to its originally constructed specifications, officials said.
The post $73.5M Beach Replenishment Project To Begin appeared first on Jersey Shore Online.