61 °F Ocean City, US
May 16, 2024

Applicant to amend Upper Township hotel proposal

SEAVILLE — An application to allow construction of a hotel and apartment complex in Seaville is on hold for now.

The proposal, which the Upper Township Zoning Board tabled last month, was listed on the meeting agenda with an asterisk noting changes will be made and the public notified again before a hearing on the matter.

Applicant John Federico was seeking multiple variances to build a combination hotel/apartment complex next to Cedar Square Shopping Center.

Federico’s attorney Kris Facenda said after the proposal was tabled that he and the other experts working on the project had “a couple of things to iron out” but expected to be ready to present the proposal March 7. It’s now unclear when the proposal could be heard, but the earliest would be the next meeting April 11.

Federico requested a use variance and multiple bulk variances, along with preliminary and final major site plan approval, to build a 108-room hotel and 24 apartments on Block 560, lots 2 and 3, otherwise known as 2069-2071 Route 9 South.

The wooded property, which is irregularly shaped but just short of 250 feet wide by an average of 1,581 feet deep, stretches from Route 9 to the Garden State Parkway, close to the southbound junction and Route 50.

If completely built, the complex would include two 12-unit apartment buildings, two 24-room hotel buildings and a 60-room hotel building. The proposed buildings would be 185 feet by 65 feet for the 60-unit main hotel and 120 feet by 45 feet for the smaller hotel and apartment buildings.

The plan called for 170 parking spots spread throughout the complex, as well as a drainage basin and other improvements.

A use variance was required for a dual residential/commercial development. According to the variance and waiver justification report, the property is in the Town Center Core Zone, where the “intent is to promote a desirable mix of commercial and residential land uses within a vibrant, pedestrian-friendly village environment.”

Bulk variances were required for minimum lot width, minimum lot frontage, maximum height, landscape buffer and a parking deficiency.

The front setback would be 91 feet, with 896 feet in the rear and 26 feet on each side and a maximum height of 49.5 feet.

The variances for lot frontage and lot width are minimal, with about 248.5 feet where 250 is required. However, the proposed maximum height of 49.5 feet is a full 10 percent larger than the 45 feet permitted.

Additionally, a 5-foot landscape buffer was proposed where 15 feet is  the minimum required.

According to the engineer’s report, Federico plans to complete the project in two phases. Phase 1 would involve construction of the apartment buildings, 48 parking spaces, three drainage basins and a septic system located near the rear of the property. The second phase would consist of the hotel buildings and 122 parking spaces.

Federico, of Miami Shores, Fla., operating as Fair Investment Partnership, was seeking final approval for phase 1 and preliminary approval for phase 2.

Regarding the parking deficiency, 170 spots are proposed, 13 short of the number required. The plans call for only 10 spots outside each 12-unit apartment building and 19 adjacent to each 24-unit hotel, while the remaining spaces would be around the main building in the front.

It was not clear what amendments Federico plans to make to the application.

By CRAIG D. SCHENCK/Sentinel staff

Related articles

Former Knight’s Pharmacy may become mixed use

OCEAN CITY — A four-story mixed-use building may replace the former Knight’s Pharmacy after the Ocean City Planning Board granted multiple variances and major site plan approval to First Knight 916 Wesley LLC on April 5. The company, owned by brother Raj and Yogi Khatiwala, received necessary approvals to build a four-story building with a 3,132-square-foot […]

‘Breakfast walks with Grandpa’

Duo visited 20 restaurants to help those hit by pandemic, to spend quality time together By DAVID NAHAN/Sentinel staff OCEAN CITY – On a warm August morning, 13-year-old Calum Binder sits at a table on the second-floor deck of his family’s bayside home on Fourth Street. A big notebook is in front of him. His […]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *