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Herald Real Estate offers comprehensive local information.
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Property Transfer Charts
Select your desired date below for a PDF of the property transfers reported in that week. Since it takes time to compile the data for both the Herald and the County Clerk, the transfer week may be up to two weeks behind today's date. Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed.
An eyesore that has plagued this city’s downtown business district for nearly five years will soon be healed.
Those who opposed construction of a low-and-moderate income apartment complex near the intersection of Mechanic Street and Railroad Avenue have something to celebrate.
Attorney General Paula T. Dow and Division on Civil Rights Director Chinh Q. Le recently issued an updated legal memorandum detailing the rights of property buyers and renters under state and federal law, as well as the obligations of property sellers and real estate professionals.
The Children’s Fresh Air Home on Surf Avenue will have the front porch removed from the structure this week. After receiving a structural report from MV Engineering, it has been determined that the porch is in extremely poor condition and must be removed.
The historic Fishing Creek School is sporting a new cedar shake roof as part of its restoration.
Conifer Village, a 62-unit apartment complex on Bayshore Road for low-income senior citizens is anticipated to open in September.
The Vannaman Team announced that Brian McEwing joined Schick Real Estate and Insurance Agency. McEwing was born and raised here and is a graduate of Lower Cape May Regional High School, Class of 2003.
The Jetty Motel application before the city’s Planning Board has had more lives than Morris the Cat with a history dating back to 2006.
For many years the parking requirements under the N.J. Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) Coastal Area Facility Review Act (CAFRA) regulations have made coastal redevelopment of hotels a difficult venture. These standards required as many as four parking spaces for each hotel unit – an overburden strangling the economic vitality of hotel redevelopment.
A bill sponsored by Senators Raymond Lesniak and Jeff Van Drew which would replace the failed Council on Affordable Housing (COAH) with common sense, achievable affordable housing regulations was approved by the Senate today by a vote of 28-3.