

An evaluation of what needs to be done there will start before the 25th certificate of occupancy is issued, he said.

Meyer said it is difficult to be precise because his company currently does not have complete access to the property. The township would like to see a restaurant open in the house, but its actual use remains to be determined. Mayor Louis Manzo, a board member, asked the developer if he could be more specific regarding a rehabilitation plan and timeline for the Knisely property. “So, we need some cash flow coming in in order to reinvest back into the project.” “The cost of doing both the Knisely property and the bridges is exorbitant,” project engineer Jay Sims testified regarding the certificate-based timing. The “trigger” to start the bridge work is when the township issues the 67th certificate of occupancy, or C.O., to Meyer. Under the agreement, Bob Meyer Communities is required to start rehabilitation work on the house and property once the township has issued 25 certificates of occupancies for its completed houses.Ī second example is construction of a bridge over Raccoon Creek at the north end of the age-restricted community. One example is a developer commitment to acquire and restore a house at 72 North Main Street, which the township considers of historic interest. That house, whose ownership is listed to Christopher Knisely, will eventually become a corner property to one of three entryways to the new community. The agreement links some actions to progress in selling homes, rather than tying their start to a specific phase or timetable. Orchard View is subject to a development agreement with the township. Most units would be single-family houses, balanced against 51 carriage-style houses. As many as five phases are contemplated in the project, which would top out at 190 units. More: Jack & Jill gets development plan approval in Logan, exiting Moorestown HQĬonstruction could start this fall on 67 single-family houses. More: Mullica Hill age-restricted community up for planning approval for first phase Medford developer Bob Meyers had submitted an overall plan for the project for preliminary approval in February.


Phase one for Orchard View at Mullica Hill received unanimous final approval at a township Joint Land Use Board on Thursday night. HARRISON – Mullica Hill will host a new source of 55-and-older housing, near its historic downtown district, on what now is largely farmland between Woodland Avenue and Swedesboro Road.
