Mayor Leonard Desiderio stands next to the site of Sea Isle City's future community recreation center.
By DONALD WITTKOWSKI
After more than five years of planning, designs and public feedback, Sea Isle City will break ground this spring on its community recreation center following the award of a $21 million construction contract for the project.
Voting 5-0 at a meeting Tuesday, City Council formally awarded the contract to Ernest Bock & Sons Inc., a Philadelphia company that has built a diversified portfolio of public and private projects during its 75-year history.
Bock & Sons submitted the lowest bid for the community center project in December among five companies that competed for the contract. The state Comptroller’s Office scrutinized the construction documents to make sure the contract met all of the requirements before it was formally approved by Council.
Mayor Leonard Desiderio said at the Council meeting that the contract “represents the culmination of years of planning, review, public participation, architectural and engineering design, and plain old hard work and grassroots efforts.”
He predicted that the facility will be a hub for community gatherings, programs, activities and events while serving Sea Isle residents “for generations to come.”
“I want to thank City Council, city staff, and the public for all of their efforts to bring us to this point. We look forward to a big turnout at our soon-to-be scheduled groundbreaking ceremony,” he said.
He added that Bock & Sons will be authorized to begin construction after the contract is finalized within the next couple of weeks, which should place the groundbreaking sometime in March or April.
Construction is tentatively expected to take 2 to 2½ years to complete, Desiderio said. City officials will meet with Bock & Sons soon to nail down the construction schedule. Barring unexpected delays, the project would be finished sometime in 2026.

Construction will begin in the spring, but for now the site is sealed off behind a chain-link fence.
As a prelude to construction, a massive pile of soil, also known as fill, was placed at the site last June and is undergoing a process known as “surcharging” for several months.
Surcharging will allow the soil to become compact enough for the community center’s foundation to be built on top of it without settling.