Special offer

Beach Haven West Waterfront Homes NOW STARTING AT $229,900 Manahawkin, NJ

By
Managing Real Estate Broker with Garabedian Realty Group

What a great buyers market it is to negotiate that great deal. NOW is the time to finally buy your boat a home here at the Jersey Shore!  Prices are dropping and are now starting at $229,900!  Get a winter waterfront market watch email deilvered daily to your inbox! 

 

Contact Charlene Grant, Realtor Associate

Century 21 Pacesetter Realty Manahawkin, NJ

Call Direct:  609-312-6625

www.BeachHavenWestHomes.com

 

The site that Beach Haven West is located on was known as Remson Meadows along the Manahawkin Bayfront. In 1950, the slat marshes were bought by the Shapiro brothers, Herbert and Jerome, who developed vacation homes throughout the Jersey Shore. Using a dredge towed up from North Carolina, construction began on Beach Haven West's 130-plus saltwater lagoons and 5,000 single-family homes. Beach Haven West was built in phases, the first opening in 1957. The first phase contained the lagoons and cul-de-sacs braching between Morris Boulevard and Jennifer Lane. By the early 1960s, the second phase was completed, this one spanning between Jonathan Drive and Walter Boulevard. Afterwords, the third phase was completed, which contained the development along Mill Creek Road between Route 72 and Jonathan Drive, as well as the Charles Boulevard spur. By the 70s, the lagoonfront community was expanded down Mill Creek Road towards East Point.

The Shapiros later sold their remaining properties to Lincoln Properties, LLC, another shore development firm. They completed the Mill Creek Road section along Mill Creek down to Barnegat Bay at East Point, added the southern lagoons along Newell Avenue known as Village Harbour, and developed the Colony Lakes section by 1986.

Through satellite imagery, it is evident that the community was intended to expand below the delta of Mill Creek at the bay. Ghosts of about a dozen partially dredged lagoons in that area, as well as a curious curve in Newell Ave, indicate the planned expansion. However, a lack of permits, increasing pressure from the EPA and the Wetlands Protection Act of 1970 kept the community from expanding further