Bobby Sharma, left, and Varinder Kumar were both working at the reopened Grace Oil station on Wednesday
By Tim Kelly
Just when you thought Ocean City was going to face the summer tourism season with no gas stations along the Ninth Street corridor, the former Grace Oil station at Ninth Street and West Avenue became the current Grace Oil Station.
Quietly and with zero fanfare, the station, shuttered since March, reopened at 10 a.m. Wednesday.
“It’s a good idea to have a gas station here,” said Steven Underwood of Mount Laurel, Burlington County, who was in town for a day trip with his mother, Mary Ellen. “It’s convenient. I needed gas and now I can just leave town and get right on the (Garden State) Parkway.”
It was thought the station would be demolished before Memorial Day to clear the way for a new bank and parking lot. Wiesenthal’s Auto Repair Shop, which originally operated the station and the repair business on the site, closed April 1.
In recent years, Wiesenthal stopped selling gas and Grace Oil took over that aspect of the business, sharing the building with the repair shop.
Co-owner Don Wiesenthal said a gas station and repair shop had operated there for more than 50 years. And now, it appears the gas sales portion of the facility will be back, at least for the summer season.
There was speculation that regulations, including environmental cleanup of the station, could not be completed for demolition to take place in a timely fashion.
No matter the reason, Grace Oil made the decision to re-open and take advantage of gasoline sales to summer visitors and residents.
Ocean City’s year-round population of 12,000 swells to 150,000 during the summer months, and prior to the station’s re-opening, the lone remaining gas station in town was at 34th street and West Avenue.

Steven Underwood and his mother, Mary Ellen, were among the few people in town who noticed the Grace Oil station at Ninth Street and West Avenue had re-opened.
The city earmarked over $1 million from its operating budget to clean up the area and made efforts to purchase the stations.
Ultimately, Ocean City partnered with Cape May County to create a landscaped mini-park where the BP and Getty stations had been.
Prior to that, the old Exxon site on the in-bound side of Ninth Street was purchased by the Keller Williams Real Estate firm, which has plans to erect a new office building.
While no one would argue the visual improvement of replacing the old stations with a park and a modern office building or the environmental benefits of removing underground gas storage tanks from a barrier island, the price of progress is a loss in convenience.
“Saturdays in the summer – changeover day for rentals – will be challenging,” Don Wiesenthal said in April of the increased traffic both coming and going in Ocean City. “You’re asking people to adjust from multiple gas stations and a repair shop on the main corridor in and out of town, to no repair shop and no gas stations.”
All that changed on Wednesday.
“They are going to crush it here,” Mary Ellen Underwood said. “They have a captive audience and no competition.”
Bobby Sharma, left, and Varinder Kumar were both working at the reopened Grace Oil station on Wednesday.