The Bergen Record

3 towns urge changes for Netflix studio plan

- Dan Radel When Jersey Shore native Dan Radel is not reporting the news, you can find him in a college classroom where he is a history professor. Reach him @danielrade­lapp; 732-643-4072; dradel@gannettnj.com.

OCEANPORT – The three Fort Monmouth towns have spoken.

While no town threw up any roadblocks to Netflix building its production studios here, they did ask for minor changes during their review period of the all-important Amendment 20 at the former Fort Monmouth.

They want smaller hotels, an increase in the size of some of the nobuild zones and buffers between the studios and residentia­l homes and signage moved further from the Avenue of Memories.

“Our residents voiced concerns about building heights and setbacks and we answered them with clarity and came back with a reasonable plan,” Oceanport Mayor Tom Tvrdik said, after voting “yes” on Amendment 20 last week.

Amendment 20 is the much anticipate­d developmen­t of a motion picture, television and broadcast studio campus, which was not contemplat­ed under the fort’s 2008 reuse plan. That plan was drafted three years before the military installati­on closed in 2011 to be the master plan for the fort’s redevelopm­ent.

As part of the redevelopm­ent process, any time a change to the plan comes up, the reuse plan must be amended to reflect the new use. So far there have been 19 changes, perhaps none so big as number 20 — the Netflix studio. The review period for Amendment 20 began on Nov. 3 and ended Dec. 20.

The Fort Monmouth Economic Revitaliza­tion Authority, or FMERA, approved the amendment last week and it now sits on Gov. Phil Murphy’s desk for the final OK. As FMERA is a state agency, the governor has the ultimate approval power.

The fort’s three host towns — Eatontown, Oceanport and Tinton Falls — had 45 days for a public review.

One change is the permitted height of hotels in the Mega Parcel eyed by Netflix were reduced from 84 feet to 72 feet. Another was digital monument display sign that is permitted in the Mega Parcel near the Route 35 entrance can’t be placed within 250 feet of Avenue of Memories.

In Oceanport’s “400 Area,” which lies to the east of Oceanport Avenue, a nobuild setback along Riverside Avenue and the North Jersey Coastline Railroad was increased from 25 feet to 150 feet. The maximum building heights in the

400 Area, were reduced from 85 feet to

72 feet.

Eatontown also asked for additional landscapin­g buffering between Rose Court and the Mega Parcel.

Affordable housing changes

Several parcels were sewn together to make the 292-acre Mega Parcel. Two of those parcels were planned for towncenter type developmen­ts complete with residences, retail and commercial spaces. Those properties were Parcel B in Eatontown and the 400 Area in Oceanport.

Since Netflix is not building any residences, the affordable housing that was to be built in those two parcels has been moved to three developmen­t zones on the southern perimeter of Mega Parcel. The parcels give Eatontown room to build 62 units of affordable housing and Oceanport has room for 49 units.

What’s next?

It is still a long road ahead before Netflix’s studio, the biggest it will have on the East Coast, gets constructe­d.

If Murphy signs off on Amendment

20, then the 36-month approval process begins. Netflix will need to get the OK for its site plan from the local planning boards of two fort towns, Eatontown and Oceanport, and a myriad of county and state permits and approvals. Only after that can it finally close on the sale and begin constructi­on.

Constructi­on will be no walk in the park either. As of now, there are 109 former Army buildings dating back to the

1920s in the nine studio developmen­t zones within the Mega Parcel. Netflix will need to clear at least 95 of them. Most of them — 63 to be precise — are old barracks in the 400 Area.

Not all the buildings need to come down, though. FMERA has identified 14 buildings that can be repurposed if Netflix so chooses. Those include Mallette Hall, the Expo Theater and Vail Hall.

‘Hollywood of the East’

Netflix is planning to build 12 sound studios, plus backlots and ancillary buildings. The streaming giant is expected to invest almost $1 billion to build a total of 5.2 million square feet of studio space — what Murphy called “The Hollywood of the East.”

Murphy played a role in luring Netflix here with tax incentives. But it was also the space, roughly 300 acres within proximity to New York City, that was also got Netflix’s attention.

The sound studios are capped at 70 feet. Netflix would also be allowed to construct temporary buildings on the back lots that could be as tall as 90 feet. Those structures could be thrown up for use in a film and then taken down. The tallest permanent structure is capped at

88 feet. That is expected to be a studio business and production support office with a rooftop helipad.

All told, Netflix has agreed to create

3,500 jobs during peak constructi­on and between 1,400 to 2,200 permanent jobs once complete. However, the economic impact will be much greater, as the studios are expected to boost the area’s small businesses as workers will shop at local stores, use local caterers or need to find housing, not to mention the tourist traffic. Netflix predicts its economic impact on New Jersey over the next two decades alone will equal

$3.8 billion to $4.6 billion.

 ?? NETFLIX ?? An artistic rendering of the proposed Netflix Studios Fort Monmouth.
NETFLIX An artistic rendering of the proposed Netflix Studios Fort Monmouth.

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