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Alfred
N. Sanzari, Founder
and Chairman of Alfred Sanzari Enterprises, one of New Jersey’s most
prestigious real estate development organizations, died on Sunday,
December 11, 2005, at Hackensack University Medical Center, at age
86, after a long illness.
A lifelong resident of Hackensack, Mr. Sanzari was instrumental in
the revitalization of Hackensack. One of the first to build a luxury
apartment complex on Hackensack’s “Hill” section in 1972, The
Ivanhoe is still considered the premier apartment building in the state.
His commitment to Hackensack's transformation did not stop there.
He also developed the 335,000 square-foot Court Plaza Complex at
the corner of Essex and Main Streets, directly across from the Bergen
County Courthouse. And more recently, transformed an aging block of
buildings on Essex Street into the spectacular 85,000 square-foot,
4-story Alfred N. Sanzari Medical Arts Building, the office portion of
which was later fully leased to Hackensack University Medical Center.
His tireless commitment to improving Bergen County is also evident in
the development of Glenpointe, the 650,000 square-foot mixed-use project
in Teaneck. Sitting idle for decades, Mr. Sanzari had a “vision” for
the project which would restore the economic vitality to the decaying
area of the town.
A self-made man, with an interesting personality, Mr. Sanzari was
extraordinarily aggressive yet often conservative, extremely confident
but refreshingly humble, politically savvy yet always honest. Edward
Schotz, partner in Cole, Schotz, Meisel, Forman and Leonard in
Hackensack, a friend and business associate of Mr. Sanzari says, “He
always displayed confidence and sincerity when he dealt with
people…and had a lot of integrity.”
Even after all of his success,
Sanzari was never one to rest on his laurels, continuing to go to work
early and leave late every day of his 55-year career.
As a child during the Depression, Sanzari shined shoes for a nickel a
pair after school in order to help his parents make their $30-a-month
mortgage payment. With his father working at a paper factory in Bogota
and his mother working at Paterson’s silk mills, he and his five
siblings were very poor and often hungry. So much so, that his three
older brothers weren’t able to finish high school because it wasn’t
economically feasible for them to quit their summer jobs to return for
the senior year.
Al Sanzari knew the same fate awaited him, so he successfully convinced
his principal to allow him to complete his junior and senior years in
just one year, overcoming the first of many hurdles.
When World War II broke out, the 22-year old Sanzari was drafted to
fight in Europe. Having worked for a sheet metal company, he was
assigned to the OSS Mission Great Britain, where his skill was to drop
supplies by air to the Allied Underground behind enemy lines.
While most men returning from the war felt they deserved some
time off, Sanzari went immediately to see his former boss, Charles
Reiss. He wanted his old job back. Instead, Reiss decided to help him
start his own sheet metal sub-contracting business. The housing market
boomed and so did Sanzari’s sub-contracting business. He was finally
in a financial position to begin pursuing his lifelong dream of building
houses.
“Even in high school I knew I wanted to be a builder,” Sanzari had
said. “While other people dreamed of owning their own home, I dreamed
of building mine.”Starting with four Cape Cods in Dumont priced at
around $9,000, followed by 17 homes in Woodcliff Lake, Mr. Sanzari moved
on to luxury homes and apartment complexes. In addition to
Glenpointe and Court Plaza, Mr. Sanzari has developed Heights Plaza, an
office building in Hasbrouck Heights, Elmwood Park Plaza, an office
building in Elmwood Park, several industrial parks and garden apartment
complexes throughout Bergen County. Sanzari’s company currently
oversees a New Jersey portfolio of properties exceeding
six-million-square-feet of commercial, industrial and residential real
estate, including a mixed-use development, a hotel, garden apartments
and a luxury high-rise, all of which are owned and managed by Alfred
Sanzari Enterprises.
With intense drive and determination, Alfred Sanzari was eventually able
to build the kind of life his parents only dreamed of after arriving in
Bergen County from Italy in the early 1900s.
Mr. Sanzari served on dozens of Boards and was awarded numerous awards
for his service to the community. He served on the
Hackensack University Medical Center Board of Governors from
1986-1995; was Chairman of the Hackensack University Medical Center
Building Committee; was the
President and Chairman of the Builders Association of Northern New
Jersey during 1964 to 1967; appointed by Tom Kean to serve as
Commissioner of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission from 1985 to
1995; he was Treasurer of the Housing Authority of Bergen County from
1990-2000; he was appointed Life Director to the National Association of
Homebuilders; was Honored as UNICO Citizen of the Year in 1973; was
awarded the Good Neighbor Award two times by the New Jersey Business and
Industry Association.
He
is survived by his wife of 64 years, Mary (nee Garofano), three
sons and daughter-in-laws, Alfred and Patti Sanzari; Ben and Barbara
Sanzari; and David and Joni Sanzari; all of Saddle River, eight
grandchildren. Mari Jo Appello, Delisa Sanzari, Benita Raia, Melissa
Sanzari, Dana Sanzari, Lisa Sanzari, Ryan Sanzari, and Alfred Louis
Sanzari,
and four great grandchildren, Robbie, Gabriella, Joey and Olivia. He was
predeceased by his five brothers, Michael Sanzari, Pasquale Sanzari,
Joseph Sanzari, Eugene Sanzari and John Sanzari. The Mass of Christian
Burial will be on Thursday at 10:00 AM at the Church of the Immaculate
Conception, 49 Vreeland Avenue, Hackensack with burial following at St.
Joseph's Cemetery in Hackensack. Visiting will be on Tuesday and
Wednesday from 2 - 4 and 7 - 9 PM. Memorial donations to the
Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research, PO Box 4777, New
York, NY 10163 or the Hackensack University Medical Center
Foundation, 360 Essex Street, Suite 301, Hackensack, NJ 07601-
8556 would be appreciated. His office will be closed on Thursday,
December 15, 2005, in his honor.
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