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The Princeton Shopping Center is an open-air shopping mall in Princeton, New Jersey. Encompassing 255,000 square feet (23,700 square meters) and around fifty stores and restaurants, [1] [2] the center is known for its distinctive mid-century design. [3] [4] It is also known for its community-based atmosphere and appeal. [1]
The Nike Worldwide Headquarters is the global headquarters for Nike, Inc., located in an unincorporated area of Washington County near Beaverton, Oregon, in the United States. The campus has more than 75 buildings on 286 acres, as of 2018. [1]
The area codes in the U.S. State of New Jersey are a component of the North American Numbering Plan. 201: Northeastern New Jersey, primarily Bergen County and Hudson County. 551: Overlays area code 201. 609: Trenton, Lawrenceville, Princeton, Medford, Atlantic City, Barnegat, Wildwood, Ocean City, Burlington, Cape May. 640: Overlays 609. [1]
MarketFair (also referred to as MarketFair Mall) is a shopping mall in West Windsor, New Jersey, with a Princeton mailing address. [1] With a gross leasable area of 240,000 square feet (22,000 m 2), the mall is located along U.S. Route 1, between New York City and Philadelphia. [2] About 83,000 cars pass by every day. [2]
Nike has returned to the Country Club Plaza with Nike by Kansas City at 450 Nichols Road.. The chain first opened a store at 211 Nichols Road in mid-2017.But that location closed a couple of years ...
Forrestal Village is a 720,000-square-foot (67,000 m 2), 52-acre (210,000 m 2) mixed-use retail and office complex in Plainsboro Township, Middlesex County, New Jersey, along Route 1. Despite being in Plainsboro it has a Princeton address. It is just north of Princeton University's Forrestal campus and is named for James Forrestal.
Barnes & Noble Opening New Store in Princeton, New Jersey New Bookstore Debuts September 18, Featuring More Than 60,000 Books, Expanded Children's Department, Educational Toys & Games, and a NOOK ...
Baker's Alley looking south toward Nassau Street c. 1925, a historic African-American neighborhood displaced by Palmer Square. Originally built from 1936 to 1939 by Edgar Palmer, heir to the New Jersey Zinc fortune, the Square was created by architect Thomas Stapleton in the Colonial Revival style as the town's complement to Princeton University, which sits directly across Nassau Street from ...