In response, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection implemented a multi-phased project to restore and enhance over 400 acres of wetland and upland maritime habitat. The project will re-establish tidal inundation to a large portion of Pond Creek marsh, reduce flood risk to the upper watershed and eastern freshwater marsh area, and allow for habitat management of the northern marsh area. Critically, the project will enhance the habitat for migratory birds, fish and various threatened and endangered species that stop over at Cape May as they travel along the Atlantic Flyway each fall.
Recreational and educational facilities designed into the project include wildlife viewing blinds and boardwalks that allow visitors a unique view from the inner-marsh, and an expanded trail network and interpretive signs describing the history of the site and its restoration. The former magnesite will comprise of variable upland habitats for a variety of species, including sprawling maritime forest and dune restoration as well as a coastal grassland and forb field.