New bank, day care center first new Main Street development in years

by Sergio Bichao on Jun 17th | Email

High Hill Garage was demolished last week to make way for a bank and daycare center. Photo: Sergio Bichao

WOODBRIDGE, NJ — One down, several more to go.

Construction crews this month demolished the long-abandoned High Hill Garage on the upper portion of Main Street, marking the first new development in a commercial strip marked by vacant and derelict buildings.

The property, located next to the Woodbridge Community Center, will make way for a 10,000-square-foot child daycare center and a 3,000-square-foot full-service Northfield Bank.

Investment in the property exceeds $4.75 million, township officials and developers said.

Property owner 616 Main Street Woodbridge LLC, under Ankim Shah, invested more than $1.5 million in the property under an agreement with Northfield Bank, headquartered across the street at the NJ Turnpike building.

Coming soon: Lighthouse Daycare Center and a bank to replace vacant garage.

Mayor John E. McCormac said the investment will bring substantial tax revenue for the township, noting that the tax bill will not be abated. Last year the undeveloped property paid more than $20,600 in taxes, township records show.

The Lighthouse Daycare Center, which will serve children up to 6 years old, and the bank will be the newest businesses on the under-developed stretch of Main Street about a mile from the township's busy downtown.

Nearby is the gym Club at Woodbridge and a strip mall with a Wegmans supermarket and a Lowe's home improvement store. But also there is a vacant former Bally Total Fitness that suffered a roof collapse this year and the Sleep nightclub that was shuttered six years ago.

Officials said the nightclub is slated to become a kidney dialysis center. The former fitness center is still up for grabs.