Cumberland County Planning Board Reviews Inspira, Phoenix Redevelopment, and Housing Applications
A 151,200-sq-ft Inspira medical complex in Vineland and Bridgeton senior housing phases were up for formal board action on April 1.

A 151,200-square-foot Inspira medical office complex in Vineland anchored the Cumberland County Planning Board's April 1 agenda, alongside two phases of a senior housing redevelopment in Bridgeton and a single-lot subdivision in Millville.
The Inspira project, designated case V-8-26, calls for a medical office building with a footprint of 26,585 square feet as part of the larger total development near the Sherman Avenue area. Vineland serves as the regional health hub for Cumberland County, and board approval of the site plan would expand local outpatient capacity while also triggering formal review of traffic, stormwater, and utility infrastructure in the surrounding area.
The board also took up cases B-2-26A and B-2-26B, covering two phases of the Phoenix Senior Redevelopment in Bridgeton: lot consolidation and townhome construction. The Phoenix project is part of sustained efforts to revitalize downtown Bridgeton by converting existing parcels into senior housing and townhomes, changes that carry direct implications for the city's housing supply and property tax base.
Rounding out the residential slate was case M-4-26, the LaCivita subdivision in Millville, which proposed the creation of one new lot.
The board also considered a resolution consenting to an amendment of the Lower Delaware Water Quality Management Plan, linking county land-use permitting to broader regional water-quality objectives. The amendment carries added significance given ongoing state and local debate over large industrial development and aquifer protection across South Jersey.
The meeting convened at 3:00 p.m. at the County Extension Center in Millville and was accessible by teleconference. Formal action was on the table for each application, meaning the board held authority to advance projects toward final approval. Public comment was built into the proceedings, giving Vineland and Bridgeton residents the opportunity to put concerns about construction timelines, traffic, and neighborhood impact on the county's official record before permitting decisions move forward in the weeks ahead.
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