Few resources in South Jersey are as important to this area as farmland.
Not only is farmland – open, fertile, tillable acreage – the driving force behind South Jersey’s vibrant agricultural economy, it’s also a defining component of the entire Garden State.
As open space, farmland is also an irreplaceable natural resource.
Once it’s gone, it’s unlikely to return.
Over the past two decades, however, the demand for housing in Gloucester County has turned centuries-old farm fields into residential developments, as McMansions and cookie-cutter tract homes vied for the attention of planning boards and town councils along with shopping malls and big-box stores.
To the south, in Salem and Cumberland counties, development has taken a toll on available open space, but hardly on the scale seen in Gloucester.
Current economic conditions have eased the pressure from residential and commercial developers who once were scrambling to buy up land, but – once the recession ends for good – preservationists warn that developers and land speculators will again be looking to buy up the remaining available open space on the East Coast – particularly along the busy Northeast corridor between Boston and Washington, D.C.
In other words, right here
http://www.nj.com/salem/index.ssf/2011/11/playing_the_fields_as_develope.html
Not only is farmland – open, fertile, tillable acreage – the driving force behind South Jersey’s vibrant agricultural economy, it’s also a defining component of the entire Garden State.
As open space, farmland is also an irreplaceable natural resource.
Once it’s gone, it’s unlikely to return.
Over the past two decades, however, the demand for housing in Gloucester County has turned centuries-old farm fields into residential developments, as McMansions and cookie-cutter tract homes vied for the attention of planning boards and town councils along with shopping malls and big-box stores.
To the south, in Salem and Cumberland counties, development has taken a toll on available open space, but hardly on the scale seen in Gloucester.
Current economic conditions have eased the pressure from residential and commercial developers who once were scrambling to buy up land, but – once the recession ends for good – preservationists warn that developers and land speculators will again be looking to buy up the remaining available open space on the East Coast – particularly along the busy Northeast corridor between Boston and Washington, D.C.
In other words, right here
http://www.nj.com/salem/index.ssf/2011/11/playing_the_fields_as_develope.html