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[quote="Cranbury Press"]Water tower may be torn down Thursday, May 7, 2009 11:47 AM EDT By Maria Prato-Gaines, Staff Writer CRANBURY — A fixture of the community’s skyline for more than a century could soon be just a distant memory as the owner of the “Historic Cranbury” water tower plans to dismantle the structure, deciding it has outlived its usefulness. Representatives from the New Jersey American Water Company, which owns both the structure and the parcel of land on Maplewood Drive it stands on, said no timeline has been set for the removal. ”The water tower has been out of service for the better part of 10 years now,” said Richard Barnes, spokesman for the company. “We don’t want to invest in a structure that adds no value to our customers.” Aside from its antiquated state, the tower also has begun leaking, prompting the company to insist on its removal, he said. ”We’ve presented a number of proposals to help (the Cranbury Historical and Preservation Society) retain the historic memory of the tower but for right now, we have plans to take it down,” Mr. Barnes said. Township historian and society member Betty Wagner said she’s been trying to negotiate with New Jersey American Water to restore this piece of the township’s “historical fabric” for more than a decade. Reading from a letter she had prepared for the company, Ms. Wagner said she only hopes the community will find a way to salvage the tower. ”It has been a symbol of permanence in a century of change from the horse-drawn carriage era to the automobile,” she said. “It’s been indignant to the passage of time.” The tower, which was constructed in 1906 by the Cranbury Water Company, was converted from a wooden to a steel structure in the early 1940s, she said. Eventually Elizabethtown Water Company, which later became New Jersey American, purchased it. In modern times, the tower is realistically too small to be used as a backup water system and even has levels of radon that would make it unusable in its current state, said society member Mark Berkowsky. However, like Ms. Wagner, Mr. Berkowsky said those factors do not change the historical significance it holds for the community. ”It draws from a time when we were much more self-reliant,” Ms. Wagner said, recalling a time in the township’s past when the tower’s water supply was drawn from the local wells. New Jersey American Water Company is in the process of retaining the proper permits and procuring a company that would be able to take the structure down, Mr. Barnes said. For the time being, the company has offered Ms. Wagner a few options, including using signage at the site, providing members with the dismantled tower pieces or even selling the structure, along with the land, to the society. Each option poses its own pitfalls, Ms. Wagner said, as the society has neither the equipment nor the land to supplant the tower and certainly does not have the approximately $300,000 it would cost to purchase the tower and property. ”We looked at matching fund programs,” Mr. Berkowsky said. “But it’s just the wrong economic time. Everyone wants to save it, but no one has any great ideas where the money’s supposed to come from.” Anyone with ideas or who wish to make a donation are encouraged to call 609-860-1889 or e-mail the society at historycenter@comcast.net. http://www.centraljersey.com/articles/2009/05/08/cranbury_press/news/doc4a030208582ee423646734.txt[/quote]
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Guest
Posted: Tue, Jun 23 2009, 10:23 am EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
Elmo wrote:
Guest wrote:
What about the COAH impact?
Don't worry about COAH. Elmo thinks maybe Hyatt Place will set aside 20% of their suites for low and moderate income guests.
Considering that NJ taxpayers are already subsidizing housing, education, healthcare and car insurance, why not throw in maid service, too?
Guest
Posted: Mon, Jun 22 2009, 9:46 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
Let's allow an apartment building for low income to go up right next to the hotel. Satisfies COAH and will add to the skyline void left by the water tower.
Elmo
Posted: Mon, Jun 22 2009, 6:51 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
Guest wrote:
What about the COAH impact?
Don't worry about COAH. Elmo thinks maybe Hyatt Place will set aside 20% of their suites for low and moderate income guests.
Guest
Posted: Mon, Jun 22 2009, 8:47 am EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
What about the COAH impact?
Guest
Posted: Mon, Jun 22 2009, 8:17 am EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
If the skyline is such a big issue, can we get rid of the cell towers that stick up into the sky? The owners of the property where the cell towers stick high into the skyline are making a nice profit from these eyesores. Then some complain that a new building will have a negative impact.
All this complaining about "progress". I do not understand why some people get so scared of any new business opening or building in Cranbury. Won't these new businesses help with taxes? Let's move forward !
Guest
Posted: Sun, Jun 21 2009, 11:55 am EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
Elmo wrote:
Elmo thinks we should move the water tower to the top of the new Hyatt Place hotel for all the world to see.
Elmo very funny. Maybe we can rename the town "Hyatt Place" so we can still have the name of the town advertised above the tree-line.
Welcome to historic Hyatt Place, NJ- home of unbridled commercial development and the highest share of COAH housing per capita in the world!
Guest
Posted: Sun, Jun 21 2009, 10:43 am EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
Quote:
Elmo funny. The library board would still need to do an expensive study first to see if this (once in a lifetime opportunity) makes sense. Its simply not obvious to them that you can't convert the water tower into a usable library, even into the tallest library in the world. (Wow what an opportunity to fill it full of dusty books, and hire new staff, and have a really huge space with our current very little traffic/usage cept for the students.) Wonder if the boy scouts and Sr.Citizens could climb to the meeting rooms at the top? Maybe they can persuade another special interest group to join them and start complaining about lack of meeting rooms in the current. I'm just worried about how much water pressure would be coming out of the drinking faucets if we did this water tower conversion.
Dear Guest,
I can guess by your satirical comments that you are not a library fan. Our public library has so many new books, playways, and other cool things. It is a great place to visit.... Water tower and public library are two different things.
Elmo
Posted: Sun, Jun 21 2009, 9:51 am EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
Elmo thinks we should move the water tower to the top of the new Hyatt Place hotel for all the world to see.
joe the plumber
Posted: Sat, Jun 20 2009, 11:15 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
Is there any way to keep the tank part of the tower? You know...the bit that says HISTORIC CRANBURY and put that somewhere?
It does look kinda cool.
JoniMitchell
Posted: Sat, Jun 20 2009, 11:10 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
I guess there are "boutiques" but what about the "screaming hot spot?"Also no big yellow taxi's(yet)
Hoppy
Posted: Sat, Jun 20 2009, 9:30 pm EDT
Post subject:
Jersey Dad wrote:
So the current proposal for Cranbury's skyline is to take down the "Historic Cranbury" water tower and put up a 60 foot tall Hyatt Place hotel. Maybe next year we can "pave paradise and put up a parking lot".
I think that about sums it up. Oh well, at least we get to keep the finial.
Jersey Dad
Posted: Sat, Jun 20 2009, 7:42 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
So the current proposal for Cranbury's skyline is to take down the "Historic Cranbury" water tower and put up a 60 foot tall Hyatt Place hotel. Maybe next year we can "pave paradise and put up a parking lot".
Guest
Posted: Sat, Jun 20 2009, 11:38 am EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
Elmo wrote:
Elmo thinks the library could buy the water tower and make it the "reading tower".
Elmo funny. The library board would still need to do an expensive study first to see if this (once in a lifetime opportunity) makes sense. Its simply not obvious to them that you can't convert the water tower into a usable library, even into the tallest library in the world. (Wow what an opportunity to fill it full of dusty books, and hire new staff, and have a really huge space with our current very little traffic/usage cept for the students.) Wonder if the boy scouts and Sr.Citizens could climb to the meeting rooms at the top? Maybe they can persuade another special interest group to join them and start complaining about lack of meeting rooms in the current. I'm just worried about how much water pressure would be coming out of the drinking faucets if we did this water tower conversion.
Elmo
Posted: Fri, Jun 19 2009, 5:38 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
Elmo thinks the library could buy the water tower and make it the "reading tower".
Guest
Posted: Fri, Jun 19 2009, 8:38 am EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
Well for 300,000 it seems the water tower would have been a better buy than a ball field. All they needed to do was make it a "historical park" and we could have had county funds.
Perhaps the Historical Society or another organization can do a fund raising and build an old fashioned wooden water tower on that site to keep the skyline.
Guest
Posted: Fri, Jun 19 2009, 6:40 am EDT
Post subject: Re: Water tower may be torn down
Current tower dates from the 1940s.