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The People's Bank and Trust Company Building is an Art Deco skyscraper built in 1931 and located at 663 Main Avenue in the city of Passaic in Passaic County, New Jersey. The 154-foot (47 m) tall building is the highest in the city. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 19, 2018, for its significance in ...
Paterson Plank Road, Orient Way, Main Avenue, NJ 495-Marginal Highway: roughly parallel to NJT 190 702: Elmwood Park Boulevard and Broadway Saint Joseph's Medical Center Paterson: Marshall Street Valley Road Van Houten Avenue Passaic Avenue Monroe Street (Passaic and Garfield) Palisade Avenue and Wessington Avenue (certain trips)
Passaic Avenue at the Essex County line in Clifton: Main Avenue, Main Street CR 509 in Paterson: CR 602: 2.55 4.10 CR 601 in Clifton: Allwood Road CR 509 in Clifton: CR 603: 0.91 1.46 Route 3 in Clifton: Passaic Avenue CR 608 in Passaic: CR 604: 0.05 0.08 CR 631 in Little Falls: Lindsley Road CR 604 at the Essex County line in Little Falls: CR ...
The main line was abandoned past Carlton Hill, and BE Drawbridge was swung in the open position, and soon put up for sale price of $0.00 in 1964 by the mayor of Passaic. [16] On January 21, 1964, the city of Passaic awarded a $1,920 (1964 USD) contract to raze the Passaic Park station to Naples Excavating Company, a local contractor. [7]
The station is located in the Passaic Park section of Passaic at an intersection that links Passaic Avenue and Van Houten Avenue with Lackawanna Place. The Hoboken bound platform is located on the Passaic Avenue side of the station and the Suffern bound platform is located at the intersection of Van Houten Avenue and Lackawanna Place ...
Railroad service through the city of Passaic began on May 28, 1832 with the opening of the Paterson and Hudson River Railroad through Acquackanonk to Paterson. [4] The first station, later to be known as Huyler's station, one of the early locations of the downtown Passaic station from 1832–1848, when it was moved to modern-day Park Place. [5]
The venue closed in the late 1970s, and was the first of the original three Passaic theaters (Capitol, Montauk and Central) that would eventually be demolished. [1] A McDonald's was later built on the site the central theatre used to be at 19 Central Passaic Avenue, Passaic New Jersey. [2]
It takes its name from Union Avenue in Rutherford which connects to River Drive (and access to Route 21) in Passaic. The two-lane, four-span fixed bridge which opened in 2002 is 13.2 miles (21.2 km) from the river's mouth at Newark Bay. [7] There is another Union Avenue Bridge traversing the Passaic at Little Falls