ATLANTIC CITY - When Garden Pier opened in 1913, with its stylish Spanish Renaissance architecture and lush gardens, it provided a touchstone of sophistication that hadn't been found previously on the more garish piers along Atlantic City's famous Boardwalk.
So it may be fitting that sections of damaged concrete from Garden Pier, which once supported a lavish ballroom, a classy theater, and giant typewriter and baby incubator exhibits, will end up preserved in a kind of underwater graveyard.
Old trains, buses, subway cars, military tanks, and vessels of various vintages have been sunk seven stories deep at a spot about nine miles off Ocean City to form one of New Jersey's 15 artificial reefs. Now about 6,000 cubic yards of Garden Pier rubble will bolster the habitat for marine life in three places along the milelong expanse, known as the Great Egg Harbor Reef. If the weather cooperates, the installation will take place Friday.