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It is across the street from the New Brunswick station, served by NJ Transit's Northeast Corridor Line and several Amtrak trains. [3] H-1: The first phase of HELIX is a 13-story 574,000 square feet building which will house the New Jersey Innovation HUB, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, and a Rutgers translational research facility.
Updated map, now based on US Census boundary files/coordinates/NAVD datum, not traced from old map like old file: 00:10, 3 January 2013: 1,495 × 2,770 (2.04 MB) Mr. Matté: Update after consolidation of Princetons: 14:39, 19 April 2008: 1,496 × 2,770 (2.13 MB) Mr. Matté {{Information |Description=A blank map of all 566 New Jersey ...
Pascack Valley Hospital, Westwood (now Hackensack University Medical Center North at Pascack Valley) PBI Regional Medical Center, Passaic (now St. Mary's Hospital - Passaic) Raritan Valley Hospital, Green Brook, New Jersey [4] Riverdell Hospital, Oradell (closed 1981, demolished 1984) Senator Garrett W. Hagedorn Psychiatric Hospital, Lebanon ...
Monmouth Medical Center is a not-for-profit, 527-bed, regional tertiary care teaching hospital located in Long Branch, New Jersey. Monmouth's service area includes a population of nearly 1 million year-round residents in Monmouth, and portions of Ocean and Middlesex counties, as well as a large [quantify] population of tourists. Admissions ...
Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Somerset, located in Somerville, New Jersey, is a nationally accredited, 355-bed regional medical center providing a variety of comprehensive emergency, medical/surgical and rehabilitative services to Central New Jersey residents.
Cancer Center, Newark. The University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ) was a state-run health sciences institution with six locations in New Jersey.. It was founded as the Seton Hall College of Medicine and Dentistry in 1954, and by the 1980s was both a major school of health sciences, and a major research university.
US 206 originally passed through the center of Columbus on Atlantic Avenue and New York Avenue until it was moved to a short four-lane bypass of downtown in the late 1950s/early 1960s. The old surface route became state-maintained New Jersey Route 170 but became a county-maintained road (Burlington CR 690) in 1986.
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