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Bridgewater Commons is a fully enclosed shopping mall located in Bridgewater Township, New Jersey. The mall is located at the intersection of Route 22 and Route 202 / 206 and borders I-287 . The mall opened on February 24, 1988, [ 1 ] as Somerset County 's first and has a gross leasable area of 900,000 sq ft (84,000 m 2 ).
Route 28 is a two- to four-lane road its entire length that passes through suburban areas and runs within a close distance of New Jersey Transit’s Raritan Valley Line for much of its length. Prior to 1927, Route 28 was known as Route 9 , which was designated in 1917 to run from Phillipsburg east to Elizabeth.
Ex-Central Railroad of New Jersey GP40P; Rebuilt by Conrail 1991–1993. Last remaining units from a 13 engine order. 4101 painted in heritage NJDOT scheme. 4109 painted in heritage Central Railroad of New Jersey scheme. EMD GP40PH-2B: 4200–4219 1965–1969 1993–1994 19 Ex-Penn Central. 4208 painted in Conrail heritage paint scheme.
Bridgewater Center is a census-designated place (CDP) [5] located in the west-central part of Bridgewater Township, Somerset County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. It was first listed as a CDP prior to the 2020 census [ 4 ] with a population of 4,616.
Bridgewater Township is a township in Somerset County in the U.S. state of New Jersey, located within the heart of the Raritan Valley region.Situated within Central New Jersey and crisscrossed by several major highways, the township is known for being both the regional commercial hub for Somerset County (home to Bridgewater Commons and different corporate headquarters) and as a suburban ...
Bridgewater station is the slated terminus for the proposed restored West Trenton Line service. West Trenton trains will run southwest from here to the West Trenton SEPTA station in Ewing , and continue east along the Raritan Valley Line to its terminus at Penn Station in Newark .
The station signed on December 23, 1971, as WBRW, a middle of the road-formatted station owned by the Somerset Valley Broadcasting Corporation [2] and licensed to Somerville, New Jersey. [3] The station subsequently shifted to an adult contemporary format, [2] and was later relicensed to Bridgewater. However, WBRW began to lose money during the ...