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Teterboro is a commuter railroad station for NJ Transit in the borough of Hasbrouck Heights, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The station is located on the Pascack Valley Line near U.S. Route 46 (US 46) and Teterboro Airport between Wood-Ridge and Essex Street. Teterboro station consists of one low-level platform with a shelter ...
A map of the Hackensack and New York Railroad train line. Overview; ... Hasbrouck Heights (closed 1967) [2] Woodridge (station house demolished 1967) [2] Carlstadt ...
Downtown Darien, originally known as "Darien Depot", grew up around the train station, replacing the Noroton commercial district (2–3 miles to the east, along the Post Road) by the 1870s. By then, the train connection to New York City allowed wealthy New Yorkers to build vacation homes along the shore, beginning Darien's history as a wealthy ...
A typical New Jersey and New York Railroad station in the 1900s or 1910s featured a gable or hip roof and often had board and batten siding. [citation needed] The larger and more elaborate station at Hillsdale served as the company headquarters and was built in a mixture of the Second Empire and Stick-Eastlake architectural styles. [citation ...
Hasbrouck Heights (pronounced HAZ-brook /ˈhæz.bɹʊk/ [20]) is a borough in Bergen County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.As of the 2020 United States census, the borough's population was 12,125, [10] [11] an increase of 283 (+2.4%) from the 2010 census count of 11,842, [21] [22] which in turn reflected an increase of 180 (+1.5%) from the 11,662 counted in the 2000 census. [23]
In 1989, the attractive former station building was slated for demolition. Instead, a group of Darien residents changed it into "The Depot", a youth center. The building remains at the far end of the train station, near the intersection of Noroton Avenue and Heights Road. [8]
Kawam was asleep on an idle F train at the Stillwell Avenue station, in Brooklyn, on Dec. 22, when just before 7:30 a.m. a man set her on fire and fled, according to the New York Police Department.
Hackensack Bus Terminal, also called the Hackensack Bus Transfer, [1] is a regional bus station in downtown Hackensack, New Jersey, owned and operated by New Jersey Transit. [2] The bus station was built in the 1970s and was extensively renovated in 2007 while starting in 2006. [ 3 ]