In Hoboken, New Jersey, a waterfront redevelopment may soon bring new housing, offices, retail, and public space to an area surrounding the city’s major interstate transit hub—with highlights of the proposed plan including a 389-unit residential tower designed by CetraRuddy.  

Led by developers LCOR, the initiative known as “Hoboken Connect” aims to transform a large swath of land immediately adjacent to the Hoboken Terminal, one of the region’s most significant transit centers connecting New Jersey to New York City with train and ferry service.

Set within just a few minutes’ walk of the train terminal, CetraRuddy’s proposed design for the Hoboken Connect housing component would replace a surface parking lot with 389 residential units in a mix of studio through three-bedroom apartments, with 20 percent of the total units set aside as affordable housing. 

Given the low-lying waterfront location’s sensitivity to storm surges and rising sea levels, flood resiliency considerations will inform every aspect of CetraRuddy’s site plan as well as the design of the building itself. In addition to CetraRuddy’s residential tower, which is intended to enter construction first, other elements of the Hoboken Connect program include a 20-story office building with ground-floor retail space; extensive renovations at Hoboken Terminal itself; and a redesign of neighboring Warrington Plaza to create a large public outdoor market.  

Pending final approvals by Hoboken’s city council and planning board, Hoboken Connect could begin construction in early 2023.

For more on this story, go to CetraRuddy.