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Brigantine Island is a barrier island along the Atlantic Ocean between Brigantine Inlet on the northeast, and Absecon Inlet on the southwest. The former Quarters Inlet originally separated Brigantine Island from Peters Beach on the southwest, but through sand deposition Brigantine Island has extended its length and enclosed Peters Beach; Quarters Inlet is now closed.
Brigantine (or simply The Island) is a city in Atlantic County in the U.S. state of New Jersey.As of the 2020 United States census, the city's population was 7,716, [12] a decrease of 1,734 (−18.3%) from the 2010 census count of 9,450, [22] [23] which in turn reflected a decline of 3,144 (−25.0%) from the 12,594 counted in the 2000 census. [24]
The Atlantic City–Brigantine Connector is a freeway located entirely within Atlantic City, New Jersey, and has a route length of 2.37 miles (3.81 km). [a] It is a toll-free extension of the tolled Atlantic City Expressway (A.C. Expressway) and serves as a connector between the expressway and Route 87 near Brigantine. [1]
Cars begin stacking as one vehicle waits for a person to leave their parking space in a full Coligny Beach Park parking lot as seen on Thursday, March 19, 2020. Drew Martin/dmartin@islandpacket.com
The storms on Jan. 10 and 13, with their heavy rain and forceful, far-reaching high tides, reconfigured the gravel and large stones of the parking strip and created hazards for vehicles that would ...
Parking is $2 per hour or $10 per day at Surfside Beach access parking lots and on Surfside Drive. The Surfside Beach Pier parking lot is $3 per hour. Paid parking lasts from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
A beach tag (also beach badge, beach pass, or beach token) is an admission pass that must be purchased to access a beach. It is commonly associated with the Jersey Shore in the U.S. state of New Jersey , where many communities restrict summer beach access to residents and visitors who pay a fee for a daily, weekly, or seasonal pass.
Brigantine Inlet, Old, formerly through Brigantine Beach, on the Atlantic, now closed. [1] Brigantine Inlet was described in 1878, viz., Brigantine Inlet is at the north part of Brigantine Beach, and separates it from Little Beach. This is an unimportant inlet, narrow, and having only about five feet of water on its bar.