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Secaucus Recreation Center. As its name suggests, the North End in Secaucus, New Jersey, is the section of town north of New Jersey Route 3 and the Secaucus Plaza Central Business District, to which it is connected by Paterson Plank Road. The Hackensack River and its tributary Mill Creek create the other borders for the district. [49]
After a preliminary assessment in 2015, [17] in September 2022 the Lower Hackensack was declared a federal superfund site, triggering a process to remediate and restore the water and shoreline. [18] [19] [20] The Hackensack River Greenway Through Teaneck is a National Recreation Trail [21] which is not connected to the one in Hudson County.
Mill Creek Marsh is a nature preserve in the New Jersey Meadowlands located in Secaucus at its border with North Bergen, the Cromakill Creek, in Hudson County, New Jersey. [1] It is fed by the Hackensack River , [ 2 ] and is a contributing property to the Hackensack RiverWalk .
The Greenway (originally the Essex–Hudson Greenway) is a planned state park and greenway in the northerneastern New Jersey counties of Essex and Hudson.It will follow an abandoned railroad right of way (ROW) across the New Jersey Meadowlands, over the Hackensack and Passaic rivers, as well pass through densely-populated neighborhoods.
The 55 acres (22.3 ha) course was created on a larger site and raised the about 1.2 million cubic yards of soil to an average 25 feet with hills as high as 45 feet. [27] [28] It opened in June 2015. [29] Its name is inspired by the Pulaski Skyway. A connection to Skyway Park is planned.
Currently the area has limited public access, but may eventually connect with trails to the park and the Secaucus Greenway portion of the Hackensack River Greenway. [15] and the Essex–Hudson Greenway. To the southeast are the Croxton Yard, and the Hudson Generating Station, the PATH Newark Line, and New Jersey Transit Hoboken Terminal-bound ...
In the mid-1960s, civic leaders in New Jersey began calling for a sports complex in the New Jersey Meadowlands that would be able to lure an NFL team from New York City. The New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority Law was passed by the New Jersey Legislature in 1971 and signed by then–Governor of New Jersey William T. Cahill.
In 2009, the state also purchased 1,174 acres (4.75 km 2) in Jefferson Township the former site of the Mount Paul monastery and seminary belonging to Paulist Fathers (from 1924–2009). The tract, which will be developed into a state park, is located in the state's Highlands region on the eastern side of Sparta Mountain and featuring mountain ...