By Tim Kelly
Samantha Huck, left, and Annette Dobak, of Interiors by Joann, want customers to know the business is not closing or leaving town.
Samantha Huck, an Interiors by Joann manager, said she was happy to discuss the sale and lay to rest rumors that the business would be closing after 28 years.
“We hope to remain on Asbury Avenue and certainly we hope to stay in Ocean City,” she said. “We aren’t thrilled to have to move, but it is an opportunity to re-think and re-brand and come back as an even better full-service interior design firm. Everything happens for a reason.”
At the time of this article’s deadline, not much was officially known about the identity of the person or persons behind Bourse Building LLC or specifics on the group’s plan for the building.
The building’s entrance on 8th Street, just off Asbury Avenue.
Tenants on the building’s upper floors will not be affected by the sale, Mott said. Currently, Mott has his law office there, although a tenant said he was “basically retired and not here very often.”
According to a directory, the building also houses Ocean City Abstract, a title insurance company; the office of Tammi L. Grovatt-Dawkins; Christina Amey, an architect; and the offices of Kevin R. Dougherty, Ph.D, and Karen Leonard, LLC.
“The buyers were interested in the building as a rental property,” Mott said.
Most of the tenants have two or three-year leases in force and there are no plans to ask anyone to leave, he said.
An employee said there was one vacant office currently available for lease.
“Bourse” is a French term meaning “place of exchange,” according to the website of Philadelphia’s much larger Bourse Building, which thrives today as an office building and upscale food court. Located on 5th Street between Market and Chestnut, it is just steps away from the Liberty Bell and claims to be “America’s oldest” Bourse.
That claim actually might not be true. Ocean City’s Bourse has the same year, 1895, inscribed on its cornerstone, as that of its Philadelphia counterpart. Thus, depending on what month the Ocean City building was completed, the local Bourse could lay claim to that title.
The building’s “Bourse” sign, a local landmark in Ocean City since 1895.