Hudson County Pipeline

From the Jersey Journal:

BUSTIN’ OUT ALL OVER THE PLACE

With Donald Trump and the CEO of Reebok making a splash in Hudson County’s real estate market, 2006 was the year of the heavy hitter. The star power brought notoriety to Hudson County – even if Trump’s television apprentice Randal Pinkett snubbed Jersey City when he chose to work in Atlantic City instead.

But 2007 likely will be remembered as the year of the innovator, as a number of nontraditional projects are built, some far away from the Hudson County waterfront.

10 The historic Manischewitz factory on Bay Street in Jersey City is set to move its matzo-making operations to Newark early this year, setting the stage for a battle between preservationists and Toll Brothers, the new owner of the factory, which wants to follow Lloyd Goldman’s lead and build to the sky.

Toll Brothers, which bought the factory for $36.4 million, is expected to lay out plans sometime this year for a 40-story building, equipped with 400 housing units and 70,000 square feet of retail.

6 Outsiders may laugh at the idea of redevelopment in red-hot Hoboken, but the truth is – despite all of its residential growth – there are still large pockets of the Mile Square City that need a facelift.

The city’s planners will draw up redevelopment plans to transform these industrial areas into residential projects. These areas include the southwest redevelopment plan, western edge redevelopment plan, the renovation of the Hoboken Terminal and the Neumann Leather building.

5 The new Red Bulls soccer stadium, scheduled to open in July 2008, will be the centerpiece of a $1 billion redevelopment plan that will convert Harrison’s industrial waterfront into a modern, live-work-and-play transit village anchored by 800 apartments and dozens of stores and restaurants.

4 Dubbed the CANCO Lofts, this onetime industrial complex is quickly becoming one of the more interesting residential spaces in Jersey City – and perhaps one of the more affordable ones.

Expect the developer, New York-based Coalco, to open sales offices in the first quarter of 2007 for the first round of roughly 200 units. The units will feature large bay windows, ceilings as high as 27 feet, and price tags starting in the high $200,000 range.

3 The highly anticipated project is expected to launch this summer when shovels hit the ground, marking the start of construction for the first 500 or so civilian units at the old Military Ocean Terminal.

The first round of approvals included 600 housing units, a 150-room hotel and some commercial/retail space, along with the right to convert two existing six-story Army warehouses into mixed-use facilities and put up a 22-story residential tower on 14 acres.

2 For perhaps the first time, a large swath of Journal Square is now in the hands of one developer – opening the door for one of the most highly anticipated projects in the city’s history and promising to transform the face of the historic square for decades to come.

Jersey City-based developer Harwood Properties plans to break ground this year on two towers – one 52 stories, the other 46 – containing 1,034 apartments, 150,000 square feet of retail, and three levels of parking.

1 Widely considered as the thermometer of everything not Downtown in Jersey City, the multimillion-dollar restoration of the historic Jersey City Medical Center will begin to take shape this year.

George Filopoulos, president of Metrovest Equities, said he has sold 85 percent of the Beacon’s first 315 available units for a price range of $320,000 to $750,000. Owners are expected to move in this spring, and the company plans to begin offering its next phase of units by the end of the year.

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3 Responses to Hudson County Pipeline

  1. hobokenite says:

    Any new development in Hoboken is having problems already if they aren’t on the waterfront.

    I’m curious what their plans are for the Neumann leather building though, as I live right across from it.

  2. thatbigwindow says:

    Lots of baby carriages in Hoboken. I wonder if any of the yuppies will look for houses in good school system towns in the downward years to come??

  3. chicagofinance says:

    As a parent in Hoboken, my impression is that if you are zoned for the correct elementary school, one of the public schools is fine. There are also several private options that are fine. As opposed to need to bail out of town when the kids hit roughly 4 to 5 years old. I think that it can be delayed until at least 7-8. Ultimately, I think by the sheer force of numbers, there will be solutions. The changing of the guard will happen in the next ten years, and as a result, there will eventually have to be massive change. However, the high school is always going to be an embarassing pit of garbage no matter what they do.

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