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Redevelopment
Redevelopment is the process of rebuilding or restoring
an area or structure, which that is currently in a measurable state
of decline, disinvestment or abandonment, to a more productive condition
or use. Redevelopment may also include rehabilitation, which means
making a property livable again.
Redevelopment is APPROPRIATE when:
- Physical and economic deterioration problems are serious, and
all other private and public-sector efforts to address them have
failed;
- Properties have been lying vacant or underutilized for a long
period of time;
- Property assemblage is needed to get sites large enough for
desired land uses;
- The Municipality wants to control what is built;
- Private-sector reinvestment may need tax abatements, long-term
tax exemptions or other revitalization financial assistance.
New Jersey's Local Redevelopment and Housing Law
(N.J.S.A. 40A:12A-1 et seq.) defines the criteria and processes
municipalities must use to designate an "area in need of redevelopment"
and the special powers and financial incentives they may use to
encourage redevelopment. In order for an area to be designated in
need of redevelopment, the municipal governing body must order the
planning board to prepare a redevelopment needs study for a specified
area.
If the governing body approves the redevelopment needs study, it
may then prepare a redevelopment plan that must identify, among
other things, proposed land uses and building requirements, properties
that may need to be acquired and any needed relocation measures,
and other provisions needed to implement the redevelopment plan's
goals. Redevelopment plans are adopted by ordinance, in essence
amending a municipality's current land use and zoning plan.
For more information about Redevelopment contact Ed Fox at (856)
751-2242
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