Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Endangered NJ Historic Places

It is another kind of endangered...

Preservation New Jersey is a nonprofit group focused on preserving historic sites. They make an annual list of the top 10 most endangered historic places in the state


One example is the Joseph Hornor House located at 344 Nassau St. was built in the 1760s by the grandson of one of Princeton's Quaker founders. The two-story, brick, side-hall house originally had a one-story kitchen wing. In the early 20th century, a second story was sensitively added on top of the wing. The house is an anchor to the Local, State, and National Register Jugtown Historic District, and occupies the northeast corner of the historic crossroads of Nassau and Harrison Streets in the Jugtown section of Princeton. Nassau Street is also part of the Lincoln Highway National Register District. The corners of this historic crossroads retain two other Pre-Revolutionary buildings and an early-19th-century building. The proposed threat facing the Joseph Hornor House is its incentive design for redevelopment for the purpose of affordable housing units. The current project will include adding a four-story structure to the rear that would amass and surround the historic structure. Redevelopments in historic districts are on the rise with new Affordable Housing and tax credit initiatives. While the revitalization of neighborhoods contributes to reactivating historic places, there is a growing trend in demolition and insensitive changes to integral features of structures and streetscapes. More care and sensitivity to the impacts of historic districts are necessary through compliance with existing preservation standards and guidelines both at a local, state and federal level. Preservation New Jersey supports and encourages the development to comply with preservation standards and guidelines as it will set the precedent for other new development in the Jugtown Historic District and in other historic Princeton neighborhoods. 



Saturday, May 4, 2024

NJDEP Seeking Public Comments on State Wildlife Action Plan

NJDEP Fish & Wildlife is updating New Jersey’s State Wildlife Action Plan (SWAP). The NJ SWAP is focused on the conservation of species and habitats to prevent them from becoming more rare and costly to protect or restore. Public comment is an important part of ensuring the needs of New Jersey’s Wildlife are addressed.

These at-risk birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, fish, and invertebrates are acknowledged as Species of Greatest Conservation Need (SGCN) due to their vulnerability to threats and low and/or declining populations or data gaps. Without actions to conserve them, SGCN are likely to decline further over the next ten years, possibly leading them closer to endangerment or extirpation. The updated plan is due for submission to the US Fish & Wildlife Service in 2025.

NJFW is seeking public comments on the updated Species of Greatest Conservation Need (SGCN) based on our selection process: information sources, criteria applied, and fatal flaw analysis of the resulting SGCN list. 

Comments are due by May 10, 2024