The vacant Atlantic Seafood building next to the Fernandina Beach marina boat ramp has been declared an “unsafe structure” under the Florida Building Code and is now slated for demolition.
The city ordered a structural assessment after the lease with Atlantic Seafood formally ended last month. That inspection, conducted by Gillette and Associates, revealed significant structural failures that pose public safety risks.
“Damage to the structure appears to be a lack of proper upkeep, maintenance, and upgrades as required for the corrosive environment,” the report dated Oct. 6 stated. “We visually examined the existing wall system and found greater than 33% of the wall systems to be structurally deficient with settling, water damage, and listing due to rot and lack of maintenance.”
The report also found widespread water intrusion and noted that bringing the building up to code — especially floodplain regulations — would be infeasible. The engineers recommended demolition and replacement.
“The amount of repair and modification will require the commercial structure to meet current flood ordinance, which is not feasible,” the report concluded. “From a cost and feasibility standpoint, we recommend the structure be demolished and a new structure be designed and constructed in accordance with current flood requirements, building codes, and land development codes.”
City officials have begun exploring demolition costs, though no plans have been finalized for what — if anything — might replace the riverfront structure, which operated for more than 40 years.
The city’s lease with Atlantic Seafood Bait and Tackle LLC, originally signed in 2008 and set to run through 2028, was mutually terminated in September without financial penalty. The lease had since been reassigned to Atlantic Seafood, LLC, under Ernie Saltmarsh.
Saltmarsh voluntarily closed the retail shop and requested early termination. In return, the city waived all remaining lease obligations.
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DaveLott
To those that erroneously blame the City. “Damage to the structure appears to be a lack of proper upkeep, maintenance, and upgrades as required for the corrosive environment,” the report dated Oct. 6 stated. Under the lease agreement it was the responsibility of Ms. Coonrod as the lease holder to properly maintain the structure. Everyone knows this building suffered major structural issues for many, many years but the "good ole boy/gal network" stopped enforcement of this requirement. That same attitude allowed Mr. Saltmarsh to terminate the lease without financial penalty.
Thursday, October 9 Report this
PaulaM
The building was a mess and obviously uncared for. The smell inside was enough to knock you out. It definitely needs to go.
Friday, October 10 Report this