Toll of Commuting
News12 New York
Where to Watch
Download the App
Local
Crime
Weather
beWell
The East End
Crime Files
FIFA World Cup

Privately funded $1M project aims to stop Bay Head beach erosion

Construction on two rock groins began this week to replace the wooden ones long buried and damaged from the 1960s.

Jim Murdoch

Apr 15, 2026, 1:10 PM

Updated

Share:

More Stories

Bay Head leaders say they have a solution to stop beach erosion - after years of watching rebuilt beaches get swept out to sea.

Construction on two rock groins began this week to replace the wooden ones long buried and damaged from the 1960s.

But the $1 million project won’t cost taxpayers a penny.

The latest shipment of boulders from western New Jersey just arrived in Bay Head where they will be used to construct groins at Mount and Karge Streets. More commonly, but incorrectly called jetties, the groins are designed to trap sand flowing south to north in the natural current. The goal is to create a much more stable beach.

Years of taxpayer-funded replenishments often left cliffs after big storms. Last summer’s sand pumping stuck around only a few weeks. For this project, private funding covered the cost of the rocks, transportation, planning and construction.

Crews will first dig a trench in the tidal zone to make room for the giant boulders, and then they’ll be lifted onto a flat bed, driven on to the beach and then hoisted by crane into their final resting spots. The work will take about a month to complete.

“This is one thing we insisted upon with this group was that this must be finished well before the beach season begins. If it wasn’t we wouldn’t give them permission to start,” said Bill Gage, president of the Bay Head Improvement Association.

The Bay Head Preservation Alliance and Improvement Association wanted to replace the two groins years ago but got held up.

“We spent five or six years trying to get the permits out of the state. It didn’t happen right away,” said Bay Head Mayor Bill Curtis.

“This town depends on the beach, tourism, and renting homes here. It’s very important this beach gets protected for years in the future,” said Eckert.

More Stories

Top Stories

01:32
Screenshot 2026-05-14 065022

Shoppers see empty shelves as some Super Foodtown stores deal with supply problems

01:59
Screenshot 2026-05-14 152550

The rain has passed, now New Jersey waits on the warm-up

US Bed Bath & Beyond Bankruptcy Filing

Bed Bath & Beyond to make comeback with 5 New Jersey locations

school threat

Shelter-in-place lifted at Clark high school after unsubstantiated threat

00:19
NJ TRANSIT GEN

NJ Transit train fatally strikes person at Red Bank station

00:35
guilty verdict

Former Hillside police officer sentenced to 17 years for crash that killed Maryland couple

01:38
Screenshot 2026-05-13 174829

George Washington Bridge reopens after falling debris shuts down Cross-Bronx lanes

01:56
GirlsOnTheRun5K_2026-05-14-12-21-34

Girls on the Run program helps Paterson students build confidence through fitness

323ffd42-f5b2-46dd-831b-1d348297f384

Police capture man who fled from Gloucester County halfway house

00:28
DEADLY CRASH

Motor scooterist killed, passenger critically injured in Elizabeth

Shakira

FIFA announces Super Bowl-style World Cup final halftime show featuring Madonna, Shakira and BTS

Laser

Authorities investigate laser strike on United Airlines flight over Teaneck

six flags great adventure

Six Flag's Hurricane Harbor launches major hiring push ahead of summer season

arrow attack

Man hospitalized after 'targeted' arrow attack in Woodbury

01:53
Screenshot 2026-05-14 063441

Road Trip: Close To Home: Play! Hoboken brings games and gathering under one roof

01:55
Screenshot 2026-05-14 064912

Rochelle Park township votes to remove local 911 dispatchers

01:43
Screenshot 2026-05-13 053038

Belleville elects new mayor in an upset as the incumbent is ousted after the devasting warehouse fire

00:20
drug bust

Five arrested after $4 million Bergen County drug bust

01:42
RESchool Sports Fees_2026-05-13-22-23-42

Bernards Township adds activity fees for student athletes and club participants

00:38
chabadcrashguiltyplea1030pZC_2026-05-13-22-50-47

Man admits to intentionally ramming his car into Chabad Lubavitch Headquarters in Crown Heights

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices