Skip to content

A town square for an unsquare town

redbankgreen

Standing for the vitality of Red Bank, its community, and the fun we have together.

RED BANK: HOSPITAL BALKS AT RIVERFRONT ACCESS LAW

103 East Front Street The parking lot at 103 East Front Street, which Riverview Medical Center is seeking to rebuild and upgrade.  (Photo by Brian Donohue. Click to enlarge.)

By BRIAN DONOHUE

Could someone lurking in the thicket of a steep bank of the Navesink River peer up into the windows of Riverview Medical Center and spy on cancer patients getting chemotherapy?

It sounds unlikely, perhaps, but that’s the scenario hospital representatives cited when they asked the Red Bank Zoning Board of Adjustment to waive a requirement for the hospital to provide a waterfront public access easement next to a proposed new parking lot on East Front Street.

The zoning board and a key borough official, however, did not seem to be buying it.

The 25-foot-wide easement along the river required by borough ordinance is “probably not negotiable,” Zoning Board Chairman Raymond Mass told an attorney and planner representing the hospital at Thursday’s board meeting. With that, and similar statements by Borough Director of Community Development Shawna Ebanks, the meeting was essentially over, with hospital reps requesting the matter be tabled until at least the next meeting. 

The building that sat on the property before being demolished by Riverview Medical Center last year. 

Riverview Medical Center is seeking approvals to build a 23-space parking lot on its property at 103 East Front Street, which it has already been using for employee parking for years.

A building that had been vacant for 16-years on the property was demolished last year and zoning board approval is required for the construction of the new lot because the primary use and configuration of the property is changing. 

The Borough’s zoning ordinances require any waterfront development to provide a 25-foot access easement along the river, along with “appropriate provisions for passive enjoyment of river views by residents and the general public.”  

Paul Grygiel, a professional planner representing the hospital, told the zoning board at Thursday’s meeting they were seeking a waiver of that requirement.

He cited two reasons: first, the steepness of the slope and the lack of adjacent waterfront pathways would make it a “pathway to nowhere” through a “wild undeveloped area” no one would likely use anyway. 

“While it’s a nice objective, for most of the waterfront zone, it doesn’t really make sense on this particular property,” he said. 

Second, Riverview attorney Tyler Zeberl said, was the concern that anyone using a public access path along the river might be able to see patients receiving chemotherapy inside hospital buildings along the river to the west. 

 “You’re looking right up at patient rooms at the hospital,” Zeberl said.

“We do have an interest in protecting the privacy of our patients,” he said.  “That’s another reason why we are looking for that waiver.”

Borough Director of Community Development Shawna Ebanks pointed out that the easement was encoded in an ordinance and the hospital would need not just a waiver, but a zoning variance to build the lot without the easement. She also assured the hospital representatives that there was no current plan to create a walkway or path – or any requirement that the hospital create one.

The goal of the ordinance, she said, was simply to make sure access and easements are legally assured should the borough ever be in a position to build a boardwalk or pathway as envisioned for in the 2023 Master Plan. 

“I understand you would like the privacy of the patients and we respect that,” Ebanks said. She added, “I understand your concern that the slope and the terrain is difficult but that’s just future planning for whatever the borough has in store.” 

Mass added: “We’re not asking you to build anything. We’re just asking for the easement.”

 Board members suggest the hospital erect a six foot fence on the border of the easement to block the view of any peeping toms who may be wading through the tidal zone to spy on cancer patients.

Citing board members’ statements about their unwillingness to budge on the easement, Zeberl asked for the application to be tabled at least until the next board meeting to allow him to discuss the matter with hospital officials. 

While it seems impossible to imagine a riverfront walkway across the entirety of Red Bank’s riverfront, examples abound of places where the slow amassment of easements eventually led to a contiguous walkway. 

It was employed, for example, over decades of redevelopment to provide for the creation of what eventually became a Hudson River walkway from the George Washington Bridge in Fort Lee to Liberty State Park in Jersey City.

And while it remains undeveloped, along the western edge of Red Bank a slow amassment of easements over decades has created an almost contiguous string of public land and easements Chapin Avenue to Locust Avenue. Planners say the key is making sure easements are obtained one by one as each property is redeveloped.

Red Bank’s master plan section on the concept of a riverwalk reads: “Actual development of a walkway has remained elusive due to the significant cost and coordination involved, but this remains a long-term goal.”

The hospital’s property at 103 East Front Street recently went on the tax rolls under an agreement reached over years of tax appeals (see story below)

RED BANK/RIVERVIEW SETTLEMENT: WINDFALL OR TAXPAYER HOSING?

 

redbankgreen editor Brian Donohue may be reached via email at  [email protected] or by calling or texting 848-331-8331 or yelling his name loudly as he walks by. Do you value the news coverage provided by redbankgreen? Please become a financial supporter if you haven’t already. Click here to set your own level of monthly or annual contribution.

Remember: Nothing makes a Red Bank friend happier than to hear "I saw you on Red Bank Green!"
redbankgreen Classics
Partyline
INDOOR SOCCER KICKS OFF
Pre-k and kindergarten aged kids were at Red Bank Middle School bright and early Sunday, participating in the indoor soccer program hosted b ...
SUNSET OVER FROZEN NAVESINK RIVER
Sunset colors Saturday evening over the ice shot from  Shrewsbury Ave. (Photo by Partyline contributor Thomas Doremus)  
ICY VIEW FROM TRAIN WINDOW
View of the partially frozen Navesink River Saturday afternoon from NJCL Train #7244. (Photo by Partyline contributor Karly Swaim)
RBR BEATS RBC IN BOYS HOOPS RIVALRY
 Red Bank Regional's boys basketball came out with the win at home against their crosstown rivals Red Bank Catholic on Tuesday in Little Si ...
FRIGID DINNER FOR WATER LINE WORKERS
Work continued into the late night hours on Bank Street Tuesday night as a crew replaced several water lines to homes under the town wide le ...
SNOWY THREE KINGS DAY
The three kings in the St. Anthony of Padua Nativity scene have a dusting of snow on their crowns as well as the gold, frankincense and myrr ...
River Road Closed for Emergency Repairs
River Road was closed for emergency road work between Harrison Avenue and Lake Avenue Friday, Jan. 3.  An alert sent out by the Borough of ...
NEW YEAR, QUIET STREETS
“All Quiet on Broad” New Year’s Day morning, 9 a.m. Looking south on Broad Street. So quiet and peaceful. Who knows what a ...
Red Bank Welcomes First Sunrise of 2025!
First sunrise of 2025! (photo by Partyline contributor Thomas Doremus)
STUNNING RED BANK SUNSET TO END 2024
New Year’s Eve sunset shot from Shrewsbury Ave. (Photo by Partyline contributor Thomas Doremus)    
MENORAH LIGHTING
Red Bank Mayor Billy Portman lighting the menorah Monday night at the annual Hanukkah ceremony at Riverside Gardens Park. (photo by Brian Do ...
TRAINSPOTTING WEATHER
As temperatures soared well into the 50’s again, railroad enthusiast and photographer Eric Kreszel photographs the southbound NJ Trans ...
WATCH SLAM DUNK VID AS BUCS REACH FINALS IN BUC CLASSIC HOOPS TOURNEY
Video of slam dunk highlight in Red Bank Regional boys hoops win as team advances to finals of annual Buc Classic holiday tournament.
HELLO OLD MOVIE HOUSE!
Basie Center Cinemas on White Street is particularly busy, owing to its showing of A Complete Unknown, the Bob Dylan biopic released on Chri ...
LEAF..ER, SALT BLOWER?
Worker uses leaf blower to clear salt from sidewalks.
HERE COMES SANTA CLAUS — AND THE RED BANK FIRE DEPARTMENT
Santa Claus came to town courtesy of Red Bank Fire Department Monday, beginning a trip around Red Bank at roughly 5 pm. Braving the freezing ...
BROAD AND FRONT AT CHRISTMAS
Christmasy scene at Broad and Front Friday night. (photo by Brian Donohue)
ICE SCULPTING DELIGHTS CHILLED RED BANKERS
Ice sculptures warm hearts on a frigid day in Red Bank. Check out the photos.
FIRST SNOW BRIGHTENS THE GREEN
Christmas/Holiday Vibes on Grant Place Saturday morning after the first (almost) significant snow of the season. Two intertwined trees (is t ...
RBMS SINGERS BRING THE JOY
  The Red Bank Middle School chorus brought the joy at their holiday concert Wednesday night. Turn on your sound and click their Instag ...