A New Jersey Landmark Is Toppled

Towering smokestack is razed
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Oct 26, 2023 3:49 PM CDT
A New Jersey Landmark Is No More
The smokestack at the former B.L. England Generating Station, a coal and oil burning power plant in Upper Township, N.J., is toppled during a controlled demolition on Thursday, October 26, 2023.   (AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey)

For decades, tourists heading to the New Jersey beach resorts of Ocean City and Cape May saw the towering smokestack of the B.L. England Generating Station as they zipped past it on the Garden State Parkway. The 463-foot-tall stack was a local landmark and even a weather forecaster for some residents who glanced outside to see which way emissions from its top were blowing, and how fast, as they decided what to wear for the day, per the AP. But the power plant, which burned coal and oil over the decades, closed in May 2019, a casualty of the global move away from burning fossil fuels. And the smokestack, the last major remaining piece of the plant, was imploded Thursday morning, brought down by 350 pounds of explosives strategically placed by a demolition company.

At 10am, as a crowd of over 100 onlookers watched from a nearby pier and additional spectators on at least 50 boats moored a safe distance away in the bay took in the spectacle, a loud boom rang out, followed by two smaller ones, and the stack quickly tilted away from the water and collapsed in a cloud of dust. "Everything went as we had planned: it fell exactly the way we expected it to," said Chad Parks, a spokesman for the property owner Beesley's Point Development Group, a New York company that says it specializes in redeveloping "distressed" heavy industrial sites.

The demolition clears the way for the waterfront site on Great Egg Harbor Bay to enter its next role in providing energy to New Jerseyans: As the connection point for several of the state's planned offshore wind farms. It also will house a mixed use development likely to include a hotel, a marina, restaurants, shops and residential housing units. Because the power plant already had connections to the electrical grid, much of the infrastructure to plug offshore wind into the power system already exists in a nearby substation, making it a logical site to bring the offshore wind power onshore.

(More New Jersey stories.)

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