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 PLAN DRAWS HPC IRE

red-bank-95-east-front-111920-500x332-1039663The planning board approved the demolition of 95 East Front Street in July, 2019, but the building remains vacant and intact. (Photo by John T. Ward. Click to enlarge.)

See UPDATE below

By JOHN T. WARD

hot-topic_03-220x138-9108919Pent-up frustration over the apparent fate of a former Red Bank mansion erupted at the first pandemic-era meeting of the Red Bank Historic Preservation Commission Wednesday night.

Commission member Kal Pipo ripped the planning board for allowing the the demolition of a Victorian mansion two doors away from Riverview Medical Center – and said Mayor Pasquale Menna “sounded like he was the lawyer for” the hospital at that hearing where that decision was made.

red-bank-hpc-111820-500x313-9596057Kal Pipo, at center right, during Wednesday’s meeting via Zoom. (Screenshot. Click to enlarge.)

Additionally, a former co-owner of the house rebutted assertions about the history of the house made by her sister, who sold the property to Hackensack Meridian Health Medical Center five years ago.

In February, 2019, the planning board approved a hospital request to raze the sprawling former mansion and apartment house, located on a bluff above the Navesink River at 95 East Front Street. The borough issued a demolition permit nine months later, but the now-vacant structure remains intact.

A hospital spokesman did not immediately respond to a redbankgreen request for comment on the institution’s plans Thursday. No development plan has been filed with the borough, town officials said.

UPDATE: In a statement issued Thursday evening, Hackensack Meridian said it has “no immediate plans” to develop the property, but “any future usage of the property will be vetted and publicly discussed by all relevant public officials and boards as well as the residents of Red Bank.”

During the commission’s Zoom meeting Wednesday night – its first session since February – member Gary Saphire reported that he had met with hospital officials in the hopes of saving the structure, but “it was a foregone conclusion that they’re going to demolish the house.

“They were just intransigent,” insisting that it cannot be adapted for a new use, Saphire said.

Pipo called that stance “disingenuous. To me, it’s just a bunch of baloney.”

He asked HPC member Barbara Boas, who also serves on the planning board, to explain why that board had approved a “cart-before-the-horse” demolition in the absence of a development plan.

Boas said she couldn’t recall the meeting in detail, but said the planning board is constrained by legalities that give it less “wiggle room” than the HPC.

“The law says you have to approved the demolition of a house unless [objectors] prove something?” Pipo said.

“There was nothing that could be done about it,” Boas said.

“If the government of Red Bank, collectively, cannot save a property like that, when the same party is in control of the entire government, then what the hell is going on here?” Pipo asked. “I mean, who’s running this town? The Democrats, who were elected? The appointed board members? Riverview Medical Center?”
He said he has been told repeatedly that “there’s nothing can be done about it, and I’m sorry, but as a citizen who doesn’t understand every aspect of the law, that’s my open question that I can never get an answer to.”
He said members of the Historic Preservation Commission “get to approve a sign over a sausage shop, but we can’t prevent the demolition of a riverfront mansion on West [sic] Front Street in downtown Red Bank. Something is wrong here.”
Menna, who serves on the planning board, “sounded like he was the lawyer for Riverview Medical Center instead of the Democratic Mayor of Red Bank” at the 2019 hearing, Pipo said. “I’m very frustrated, and I just don’t know what this commission is here for if we can’t save that house.”

“The record speaks for itself,” Menna told redbankgreen in response to a request for comment Thursday.

At the 2019 meeting, when the planning board voted 6 to 3 in favor of the demolition, Menna said that “anyone who reads the Department of Health guidelines knows [the house] can’t be retrofitted,” as hospital officials had argued.

The hospital, he added at the time, is “here to stay,” provides more jobs than any other employer in town and is engaged in competition that requires expansion.

HPC Chairwoman Michaela DiBernardo Ferrigine said the commission had not been notified in advance of the hearing on the hospital’s request.

“Why that happened, I don’t have an answer,” she said. “However, I still feel there’s discussion that can be had. The house right across the street is owned by a doctor and was rehabbed” for use as medical offices, she said, referring to the property owned by Dr. Negin Griffith at the southwest corner of East Front and Washington Street.

Ferrigine said she was awaiting receipt of an engineer’s report promised by Riverview officials. Meantime, plywood that had covered some windows has been removed, “and thus begins the process of demolition by neglect,” she said.

According to research provided to the HPC by former owner Grace Greenberg, the house may have been owned by descendants of James P. Allaire, founder of the Howell Works bog-iron forge in Wall Township — now preserved as Allaire Village.

But Greenberg’s sister, Susan Greenberg, an oncologist affiliated with Riverview, disputes that assertion. In a September 19 letter to the commission, she contended that she “had never heard” of a link to Allaire, though her parents had owned the house before leaving it to her and her two sisters.

She said both generations had made renovations to the house “without addressing historic considerations.”

Later, after she sold her share in the property, her sister Grace explored tearing down the house to replace it with “a hotel, housing or other mixed usage.”

In addition, Dr. Greenberg wrote, “after many years of negotiations,” her sister sold the house to the hospital “at a premium price with the full knowledge of possibilities that the building may be razed.”

“It would be unseemly to withhold possible historic value and data from buyers and then only later to create a conflict,” Dr. Greenberg wrote.

Hackensack Meridian Health bought the property, along with the red brick office building at 91 East Front Street next door, for $2.65 million in July, 2015.

In response to a redbankgreen request for comment Thursday, Grace Greenberg did not directly address her sister’s comments.

“My daughter, Rachel Greenberg, did the investigation as to the prior ownership of the building,” she said via email. “I have always hoped the hospital would value the historic aspect of the building.”

If you value the kind of news coverage redbankgreen delivers, please become a paying member. Click here for details about our new, free newsletter and membership information.

Remember: Nothing makes a Red Bank friend happier than to hear "I saw you on Red Bank Green!"
Partyline
THREE ON TOUR
RED BANK: Three borough sites will participate in a weekend of self-guided tours of 52 historic locations in Monmouth County May 4 & 5.
VOLUNTEERS GET INTO THE WEEDS
Toting plastic trash bags, 51 volunteers conducted a walking litter cleanup on Red Bank's West Side Saturday.
“IT’S A PARTY AT WAWA!”
You wish you could vibe like Brian, who lives on the other side of Hubbard’s Bridge. He caught redbankgreen’s attention in Red B ...
POPE OKS ORATORY
RED BANK: St. Anthony of Padua obtains papal approval to establish Oratory of St. Philip Neri, a community of priests and brothers devoted t ...
RED BANK: NEW MURAL BRIGHTENS CORNER
RED BANK: Lunch Break founder Norma Todd is depicted in a mural painted this week on the front of the newly renovated social service agency.
TULIPS TOGETHER
Spring tulips taking in the sunset outside the Molly Pitcher Inn in Red Bank Monday evening.
RIVER RANGERS RETURN
River Rangers, a summer canoeing program offered by the Navesink Maritime Heritage Association, returns this summer for up to 20 participa ...
DOUBLE DYLAN IN RED BANK
Trucks for a production company filming what one worker said was a Bob Dylan biography have lined Monmouth Street the past two days with cre ...
AFTER THE RAIN
A pear tree branch brought down by a brief overnight storm left a lovely tableau on the sidewalk in front of Red Bank's Riverside Gardens Pa ...
CONE OF UNCERTAINTY
Asked by a redbankgreen reporter why these cones were on top of cars, the owner of the car in the foreground responded: “That’s ...
RAIL RIDER’S VIEW
A commuter's view of Cooper's Bridge and the Navesink River from North Jersey Coast Line train 3320 out of Red Bank Tuesday morning.
PUT ME IN COACH!
Red Bank T-Ball kicked off at East Side park on Saturday morning. The brisk weather proved to be no deterrent to the young players, ranging ...
IT’S A SIGN!
Once proudly declaring its all-but-certain arrival in Spring 2019, the project previously known as Azalea Gardens springs to life again with ...
SPRINGTIME MEMORIES OF CARL
The Easter Bunny getup and St. Patrick’s Day hat that belonged to longtime Red Bank crossing guard and neighborhood smile-creator Carl ...
RED TRUCKS AT RED ROCK
A small dishwasher fire at Red Rock Tap and Grill was put out quickly by firefighters overnight, causing minimal damage. Red Bank Fire Depar ...
CREATIVE COVER UP
The windows of Pearl Street Consignment on Monmouth Street were smashed when a driver crashed their car through them injuring an employee la ...
THEY’RE BACK!
Ospreys returned to the skies over Red Bank this week for the first time since they migrated to warmer climes in late fall. With temperature ...
SPRING IS SPRUNG
RED BANK: Spring 2024 arrives on the Greater Red Bank Green with the vernal equinox at 11:06 p.m. Tuesday.
RED BANK’S FINEST – AND NEWEST
Red Bank Police Officer Eliot Ramos was sworn in as the force’s newest patrolman Thursday, and if you’re doing a double take thinkin ...
EASTER EGG MAYHEM AT THE PARK
An errant whistle spurred an unexpectedly early start to the Spring Egg Hunt on Sunday, which had been scheduled to begin at eggsactly 11am ...