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Cirebon City Hall is designed by Joost Jacob Jiskoot (1896–1987) in Art Deco with a strong influence of Amsterdam School style. Other sources said the architects were H.P. Hamdl and C.F. Koll. [ 1 ] The foundation stone was laid on June 26, 1926.
Palisade Avenue is the name given to a historic road which parallels the eastern crest of Hudson Palisades in northeastern New Jersey. It travels between Jersey City and Fort Lee, [1] passing through Jersey City Heights, North Hudson, and Cliffside Park, with various parts carrying Hudson and Bergen county route designations.
English: Map of West Java highlighting Cirebon City. Date: 28 April 2017: Source: Own work: Author: Afrogindahood: ... New version: 00:34, 12 March 2019: 811 × 635 ...
As of 2024, New Jersey is divided into 21 counties and contains 564 [2] municipalities consisting of five types: 253 boroughs, 52 cities, 15 towns, 240 townships, and four villages. The largest municipality by population in New Jersey is Newark, with 311,549 residents, whereas the smallest is Walpack Township, with seven residents. [3]
The built-up area of Cirebon reaches out from the city and into the surrounding regency of the same name; the official metropolitan area encompasses the whole of this regency as well as the city, and covers an area of 1,116.24 km 2 (430.98 sq mi), with a 2010 census population of 2,363,585; the 2020 census total was 2,603,924 [3] and the ...
Bergenline Avenue is a major commercial district in the North Hudson section of Hudson County, New Jersey, United States. The north–south streets passes through Union City, West New York, Guttenberg, and North Bergen. Its southern end is at Union City's Second Street, the north boundary of Washington Park.
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.
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]