An oceanfront beach club in Sea Bright N.J. lies in ruins two weeks after Superstorm Sandy devastated the town. | AP Photo/Wayne Parry
A beachfront bar and grill sits in ruins two weeks after Superstorm Sandy devastated Sea Bright, N.J. | AP Photo/Wayne Parry
A shattered walkway is all that remains of a house in Sea Bright N.J. that was destroyed by Superstorm Sandy. | AP Photo/Wayne Parry
SEA BRIGHT, N.J. — Superstorm Sandy, one of the nation’s costliest natural disasters, is giving new urgency to an age-old debate about whether areas repeatedly damaged by storms should be rebuilt, or whether it might be cheaper in the long run to buy out vulnerable …