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Washington Street station is an underground station on the Newark City Subway Line of the Newark Light Rail. The station is owned and service is operated by New Jersey Transit. The station is located at the intersection of Raymond Boulevard and Washington Street with a second entrance at University Avenue, both in Downtown Newark.
Indian and the Puritan is a 1916 marble and bronze monument by Gutzon Borglum, the sculptor of Mount Rushmore, opposite 5 Washington Street, the Newark Public Library, in Washington Park of Newark in Essex County, New Jersey. [3]
The following is a list of neighborhoods in Newark, New Jersey, United States within its five political wards. [1] ... James Street Commons Historic District; East Ward
The Halo is a three-tower residential skyscraper complex under construction in Newark, New Jersey, which will include some of tallest buildings in the city. It is located on Washington Street west of Four Corners in Downtown Newark, situated between Teacher's Village and the Essex County Government Complex. The project was designed by INOA ...
October 2, 1973 (43 Washington St. Newark: Now part of Newark Museum: 7: Joseph Bardsley House: Joseph Bardsley House: July 1, 1988 (345 Park St. Montclair: part of the Montclair MRA
24 Commerce Street 260 ft (79 m) 19 1926 [72] [73] [74] 22 Dr. Stanley S. Bergen Building at New Jersey Medical School: 255 ft (78 m) 16 1954 Named for Stanley S. Bergen Jr.. Tallest building constructed in Newark in the 1950s. [75] [76] [77] 23 33 Washington Street 251 ft (77 m) 20 1971 Welton Becket, architect. [78] 24= Mutual Benefit Life ...
Newark Opera House: Court Street and Washington Street? 1,589?? Theatre was founded by Alfredo Cerrigone and general manager, for the audiences in the Italian-American Community. [56] The Newark Repertoire Company presented the popular running New York City, Stage Door (play) created in 1936 by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber. The Theater in ...
The city's tallest buildings north of Market Street. The Four Corners Historic District is the intersection of Broad and Market Streets in Newark, New Jersey.It is the site of the city's earliest settlement and the heart of Downtown Newark that at one time was considered the busiest intersection in the United States. [3]