Rebuilt beaches, museum thrive after Sandy

Nags Head, N.C. The beating from Hurricane Sandy's wind and waves tore up many beaches along North Carolina's coast last weekend, but Nags Head is reaping the dividend of building up its beaches long before Sandy hit.

Officials spent more than $30 million last year to renourish about 10 miles of beach in Nags Head, and residents say the hotly debated project can now be viewed only as a wise investment.

"It was a good move," said Charlotte Zorc, who has lived on the Outer Banks almost 30 years. "It just proves what happened with Hurricane Sandy that our beaches are looking great and a lot of houses that may have gone in the ocean are saved."

Zorc said she's relieved her granddaughters can play on the beach in Nags Head days after Sandy passed without having to worry about storm debris. Other Nags Head homeowners share her support of the five-month beach renourishment, which used tons of sand to create a buffer several feet high between the ocean and the town.

"From walking a mile to the pier, everything looks really good," Bonnie Snyder said. "In the past, (storms would) take stairways and beach. So, I think it was a positive."

Town Manager Cliff Ogburn said the project is already repaying Nags Head, which doesn't have to spending money on storm recovery.

"No water lines were damaged. No streets were damaged," Ogburn said. "We were extremely thrilled with the project and how it stood up to the winds of Sandy."

The Outer Banks Children@Play Museum in nearby Kitty Hawk didn't fare as well after Sandy sent several feet of water rushing through it and several other businesses along U.S. Highway 158 Bypass.

Director Alyssa Hannon said Wednesday that she was devastated when she saw the damage to all of the fledgling museum's exhibits, but she expressed confidence that the community wouldn't let the museum fold and would help it rebuild.

Hannon's confidence was rewarded Friday when local businessman Harvey Hess Jr. offered her a lighthouse-shaped building next to his Capt'n Franks hot dog restaurant for the museum.

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Rebuilt beaches, museum thrive after Sandy

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