Downtown Jersey City
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jersey City neighborhoods |
Downtown |
-Hamilton Park |
-Newport |
-WALDO |
-Van Vorst Park |
-Exchange Place |
-Paulus Hook |
-Port Liberté |
The Heights |
-Croxton |
-Western Slope |
Journal Square |
-Marion |
-India Square |
-Five Corners |
West Side |
-Lincoln Park/West Bergen |
-Society Hill |
-Hackensack Waterfront |
Greenville |
Bergen/Lafayette |
Downtown is an area of Jersey City, New Jersey that includes the Historic Downtown and the Waterfront. Historic Downtown can be further broken down into the neighborhoods of Harsimus Cove, WALDO (Powerhouse Arts District), Van Vorst Park, Grove Street and Hamilton Park. The Waterfront includes the Pavonia/Newport neighborhood, Exchange Place, the Harborside Financial Center and Paulus Hook.
Historic Downtown is an area of mostly low-rise buildings to the west of the waterfront. It includes the neighborhoods of Van Vorst and Hamilton Parks, which are both square parks surrounded by brownstones. Harsimus Cove and WALDO have begun to seen recent development as Harsimus Cove has had several housing developments built and a new Harsimus Cove light rail stop. WALDO (work and live district overlay) is an area that is being redeveloped from its days as a warehouse center to an artist community. It is already home to several galleries and restaurants and development of artist housing, more galleries, a museum and stores are being planned. The Powerhouse is the building that anchors this neighborhood and when it is renovated it will maintain its shell that so many locals are used to seeing. The Trump Plaza first tower is currently being constructed on the property to the south of the Powerhouse and when it is completed it will be the tallest building in New Jersey at fifty-five stories. The Grove Street neighborhood has also seen a lot of development and the neighborhood is rich with stores and restaurants that cater to the diverse backgrounds of Jersey City's inhabitants. The Grove Street PATH station is in the process of being rebuilt and a number of new housing is being built around the stop. Historic Downtown is home to many cultural attractions including the Jersey City Museum, the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad Powerhouse (planned to become a museum and artist housing) and the Harsimus Stem Embankment along Sixth Street, which a citizens' movement is working to turn into public parkland.
Like Historic Downtown, the Waterfront of Jersey City is an area rich in history and full of current development. It is the location of the end of the Morris Canal and there is still a segment of this basin surrounded by Liberty State Park. The giant Colgate Clock, next to the Goldman Sachs Tower reminds people of the industry that used to line the Hudson River on New Jersey's Coast. Many of the names of Jersey City's downtown neighborhoods come from Dutch words or Dutch names from the early inhabitants along the Hudson. Paulus Hook is a quiet mostly residential neighborhood stretching to the west from the Goldman Sachs building. Its main streets are Essex and Morris Streets and its waterfront is along the Morris Canal, where it maintains a walkway which is part of Jersey City's longer waterfront walkway. The Essex Street station on the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail and the development of office buildings to the east have allowed more businesses to line Morris Street including a number of restaurants with outdoor seating. The Paulus Hook and Grove Street neighborhoods, unlike many other redeveloped neighborhoods on the Hudson have undergone the same revitalization with less gentrification. The Newport/Pavonia, Harborside Financial Center and Exchange Place neighborhoods on the waterfront are increasingly high rise and with the addition of the Light Rail and more ferry service the area has become a growing destination for businesses, residents and tourists.