
By Paul Goldfinger. Blogfinger.net. Rear view. Photo taken before the Belmont was destroyed by fire. 2006..
Paul Goldfinger, MD. Editor @Blogfinger. Re-posted from 2016 and 2018. The editor’s note below still rings true in 2020 and has been updated.
There were two historic (over 100 years old) hotels in A.Park which were adjacent to each other on Asbury Avenue—-The Belmont and the Atlantic. The Belmont had 50 rooms, but it was vacant in 2006. The entire block was scheduled for demolition, but it burned down during a 5 alarm fire in 2006, along with the Atlantic, in December of that year. The balloon construction made for a deluge with quick destruction up and down the buildings.
An AP historian said, in an APP article, that the buildings were considered historically significant to Asbury Park and Monmouth County.
“This site is one of the small remaining number of turn-of-the-century hotels that once flourished,” he said.
“The local historical society wanted to save the Atlantic and Belmont Hotels and have them refurbished to be used for residential purposes, but the society’s efforts were thwarted some years ago by the City Council and re-developers,” he said.
“And, now that the fire has destroyed the hotels, there is nothing left to do but start from the ground up. They could have been adapted to modern uses, but now they are gone,” said the historian.
Residents said they were upset to see history disappear so quickly. “I hate to see it go,” Robert Razminas, 48, an Asbury Park resident for 25 years, said as the buildings burned. “These old places are Asbury Park history. They should be restored and kept up.”
George Tice* is one of America’s most famous photographers. He is especially known for his work in his native New Jersey. His specialty is documenting historic old buildings and neighborhoods, as in his photographs of Paterson, an old immigrant-based blue collar city.
The Tice photograph above of the Belmont is from an on-line gallery web site (Paddle8). In 1974 he photographed two Victorian houses in Ocean Grove.
Tice has published about 20 photographic books including one about the Amish in Pennsylvania and another in Ireland and England called Stone Walls, Grey Skies.
A platinum print from that book resides in Ocean Grove. Contact us if you want to view it. One of his most important books is Paterson.
Here is a link to a BF piece in 2013 which shows some of his images:
Tibet in Jersey: The Newark Museum Scores With Exhibits on Tibet and George Tice–Jersey Photographer
PHILLIP SMITH ( of Ocean Grove and the NY Philharmonic) on trumpet along with JOSEPH TURIN on piano play Gershwin’s “Someone to Watch Over Me” Note: I spotted Phil—Phil Smith and the NY Philharmonic–on TV for the Live From Lincoln Center New Years Eve show on PBS. The camera caught him having a string of rests and gazing ahead as Yo Yo Ma played a tango. He has since retired from the Phil, but he still spends summers in the Grove and plays in the Great Auditorium.
EDITOR’S NOTE: This article rings true as we think about historic preservation in Ocean Grove. These two Asburian hotels could have been re-purposed into residences while maintaining their historic “bones.”
As noted before by Blogfinger, Asbury has an advantage for preservation because of the available land for parking, but that didn’t save these two structures—they were destined to be replaced by condominiums.
Evidently the idea of remodeling them into residences was not considered because AP has turned over that entire oceanfront area to trash-and -build-new developers without any worry about history. They don’t seem to care about AP’s history and they don’t mind turning much of their reclaimed property into condominiums. I recall when the beautiful old Metropolitan Hotel, a nostalgic place, which I visited before it’s death spiral, with much history, was allowed to rot and then be demolished.
However there is a huge difference between the two towns: Ocean Grove is on the National and State Historic Registers, so we have an obligation to try and save historic buildings and not mow them down like dead ducks. But turning old hotels into condo’s here is contrary to our Master Plan which has a vision that is totally different than Asbury’s, and we really shouldn’t allow more space-clogging condo conversions of old hotels to occur, especially in defiance of RSIS parking standards.
Our old hotels need to be dealt with in ways that meet the special needs of our town, with the interests of the people and the history placed ahead of the developers and the politicians who want more money from the Cash-Cow-By-The-Sea.
Current related issues in 2018 directs our attention to the Aurora Hotel and the Warrington.* We have posted articles about both, and both face an uncertain future in Ocean Grove; and the best we can hope for in both cases would be single family Victorian designer homes.
Phil Smith’s solo above (“Someone to Watch over Me”) reminds us to protect our town’s historic treasures.
—Paul Goldfinger, Editor.
*The Warrington was destroyed in a fire on March 3, 2017. Its burned-out foundation is hanging around awaiting the results of some legal action related to the fire and its damages to the nearby neighborhood.
Reblogged this on Blogfinger and commented:
This is a re-post about saving historic buildings. We begin with two hotels in Asbury, then we get into music and photography and finally wind up with a 2018 perspective. Paul @Blogfinger
Jack, Thanks! I walked by the Aurora a couple of days ago, porches are looking a bit rotted, I assume the demo by neglect will continue till it’s demolition. Oh well! Can’t imagine what replacing all the gingerbread would cost, much better to save it now!
Renovating old buildings is too expensive. Just burn them down! Who cares about collateral damage (neighboring homes)?
We have seen this too often in OG in recent years:
1. Manchester, 25 Ocean Pathway, 3/2010
2. Surf Hotel, 27 Surf Ave, 3/2011
3. 50 Main Ave building, 2/2015
4. Warrington, 22 Lake Ave, 3/2017
I’m surprised that the Aurora survived OG’s fire season (February-March) this year.
Doug
No. The required parking must be on the same lot that the house is on.
A ‘free standing’ parking lot is not a permitted use in Ocean Grove.
However, the parking that is required is not permitted on the lot.
You can’t make this stuff up, but that is the OG zoning.
What you missed is that the Warrington, which also burned, can be seen in the background of the Tice picture. The Warrington also took down a good number of private homes.
There has been testimony given at the Board of Adjustment that just being old is not enough to be considered historic. There are standards that a building must meet in order to be considered historic and almost none in OG can meet that standard.
Better to lose a few old buildings than a whole block of private homes. OG has lost too many private homes because of these dangerous old buildings. Neptune should not endanger the residents of OG in order to save buildings that are only old for the sole purpose of lining the pockets of developers.
Kevin Chambers
Maybe, just maybe, the Aurora will stay a single family home! That would be the best outcome. If the owners bought another lot on either street for parking, would they be allowed to renovate it into 4 condos?
I would really hate to lose it, but I agree, this is a development line that shouldn’t be crossed.
In 1989, a gallery show of George Tice’s most famous photographs was held in New York City. The review in the NY Times concluded with this sentence, :
“One of the loveliest pictures, however, is of the Belmont Hotel, standing gray against the marginally lighter sky over Asbury Park.”