The Point, the outdoor bayfront bar in Somers Point, will serve as the model for the Sea Isle project. (Courtesy of GMH Restaurant Holdings)
By DONALD WITTKOWSKI
The old Springfield Inn will be replaced by The Point.
The buyer of the now-closed Springfield Inn is planning an upscale transformation of the beachfront property that would be nothing like the no-frills shore bar and nightclub that occupied the site for nearly 50 years.
The Point, the outdoor bayfront bar in Somers Point, will serve as the model for the Sea Isle project. (Courtesy of GMH Restaurant Holdings)
The Springfield Inn has been on the market for $6.7 million. Its coveted beachfront location makes it a strong candidate for redevelopment. Located at 43rd Street and Pleasure Avenue, it is the only beachfront business in Sea Isle that has a liquor license.
It is not immediately clear how much Holloway is paying or whether he has completed the purchase yet. When he first disclosed his plans to buy the property during remarks at a City Council teleconference meeting on Oct. 27, he said he had reached “an exclusive letter of intent” to acquire the Springfield from the current owners.
The Bisciotti family has owned the Springfield Inn since it opened in 1972. Sisters Betsy Cooney, Terry Eidenberg and Joanne Bisciotti followed their parents, Joe and Liz Bisciotti, as the Springfield’s owners.
Known for its shabby chic interior, the Springfield possessed a special allure for legions of casually dressed customers. The Springfield included a nightclub and the outdoor Carousel Bar, a popular spot for crowds that would come right off the beach.
Holloway, a resident of Ocean City for 50 years, said he is intimately familiar with the Jersey Shore’s bar and restaurant scene. He operated the Waterfront Restaurant in Somers Point for 17 years before demolishing it last year and replacing it with The Point.
In a related development, Sea Isle has notified GMH that its plans for a restaurant at the Springfield property will have to go before the city’s zoning board for site plan approval and a zoning variance.
Neil Byrne, Sea Isle’s construction and zoning officer, ruled that the proposed restaurant does not meet the requirements of the city’s building regulations.
“I believe that this project does not meet the definition of a fully enclosed Restaurant with liquor license or fully enclosed Tavern,” Byrne wrote in a Nov. 20 letter to Andrew Catanese, the attorney representing GMH.
The company has the option of appealing Byrne’s ruling to the zoning board or revising its plans. GMH’s redevelopment plan is far less extensive than another project that had been proposed by a previous would-be buyer of the Springfield.
The now-closed Springfield Inn will be demolished to make room for redevelopment of the property.
Springfield Inn closed in September 2019 in anticipation of its sale then to a Pennsylvania-based development group called HKM43 LLC. The group wanted to demolish the old building to make room for a new three-story complex featuring a restaurant, outdoor bar, banquet hall and condos.
However, the members of the HKM43 group announced in September that they had withdrawn from the sale talks after their investors “got cold feet” amid the coronavirus pandemic, delays in closing the deal and an unsuccessful attempt to secure a bank loan to help finance the purchase.
But only a few weeks later, GMH Restaurant Holdings announced its plans to buy the Springfield Inn and redevelop the property.