Skyline of Jersey City
Exchange Place in 2023
(Use cursor to identify buildings)
Tallest building99 Hudson Street (2020)
Tallest building height889 ft (271 m)
Major clustersDowntown Jersey City
Journal Square
First 150 m+ buildingNewport Tower (1990)
Number of tall buildings (2026)
Taller than 100 m (328 ft)49 + 3 T/O[i]
Taller than 150 m (492 ft)20 + 3 T/O
Taller than 200 m (656 ft)6
Number of tall buildings — feet
Taller than 300 ft (91.4 m)60 + 3 T/O

Jersey City is the second-largest city in the U.S state of New Jersey, and the third most populous city in the New York metropolitan area. As of 2026, there are over 120 completed high-rises in the city.[1] 60 of them are taller than 300 feet (91 meters), 20 of which are over 492 feet (150 m) in height. The tallest building in the city is the 76-story 99 Hudson Street at 889 feet (271 m), a residential tower completed in 2020. It is the tallest building in New Jersey.[2][3] Jersey City has the most high-rises in the New York metropolitan area outside of New York City itself, and the most skyscrapers of any American city that is not the largest city in its metropolitan area. Jersey City's skyline is one of the largest in the Northeastern United States. It is the city with the third-most skyscrapers taller than 492 ft (150 m) in the region, after New York City and Boston, and ahead of Philadelphia.

The history of skyscrapers in Jersey City began with the 1928 completion of the 15-story Labor Bank Building, regarded as the first skyscraper in the city.[4][5] Now known as 26 Journal Square, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. Despite being adjacent to Lower Manhattan, Jersey City saw little high-rise development until the 1980s. For most of the remaining 20th century, the tallest buildings in the city were part of The Beacon, a medical development operated by the Jersey City Medical Center. Deindustrialization and depopulation led to a period of urban decline during the mid-20th century. Beginning in the mid-1980s, the formerly industrial waterfront was redeveloped into numerous high-rise buildings such as Newport Tower and 101 Hudson Street, as the city underwent an economic renaissance.[6][7]

Jersey City went through a larger period of commercial and residential high-rise development beginning from the late 1990s, which has continued to the present. This boom has resulted in the construction of many of the city's tallest buildings, such as 30 Hudson Street, an office skyscraper standing 781 ft (238 m) tall. Completed in 2004, it is currently the city's second tallest building. However, most new high-rises have been residential. Jersey City's skyscraper boom is a part of a larger city-wide apartment boom, which has been attributed towards its accessibility to Manhattan.[8][9][10] The city had one of the fastest-growing skylines in the United States during the early 21st century, with the number of buildings taller than 300 ft (91 m) rising from 10 in 2000 to 60 by 2025.

Most of Jersey City's skyscrapers are located in along the city's waterfront on the Hudson River, which separates the city from Lower Manhattan and its skyscrapers to the west. This area of Downtown Jersey City, known as Exchange Place, is nicknamed "Wall Street West" due to its concentration of financial companies. Since the early 2020s, a second major cluster of skyscrapers has formed in the district of Journal Square, which is further inland. Beginning with the three-tower Journal Squared complex, Journal Square is undergoing substantial urban development alongside improved transit links.[11][12] To a lesser extent, high-rise development is also occurring in the city's northern end, sometimes referred to as "Soho West".[13] Due to their proximity, Jersey City's skyline is often pictured together with that of Lower Manhattan.

History

Number of buildingsYear01020304050601920194019601980200020202040Buildings taller than 300 ft (91 m)Buildings taller than 328 ft (100 m)Buildings taller than 492 ft (150 m)Buildings taller than 656 ft (200 m)Growth of skyscrapers in Jersey CityNumber of buildings by height in Jersey City by the end of each year. Click on the legend to toggle a specific height on or off. View chart definition.

Cityscape

Map of tallest buildings

The map below shows the location of every building taller than 300 feet (91 m) in Jersey City. Each marker is numbered by the building's height rank, and colored by the decade of its completion.

Tallest buildings

This list ranks buildings in Jersey City that stand at least 300 feet (91 m) tall, based on standard height measurement. This includes spires and architectural details but does not include antenna masts. The "Year" column indicates the year in which a building was completed. Buildings tied in height are ranked by year of completion with earlier buildings listed first, and then alphabetically.

  Was the tallest building in Jersey City upon completion   Topped out but not yet completed
Rank Name Image Location Height
ft (m)
Floors Year Purpose Notes
1 99 Hudson Street 40°42′55″N 74°02′05″W / 40.715374°N 74.034843°W / 40.715374; -74.034843 (99 Hudson Street) 889 (271) 76 2020 Residential As of July 2025, it is the 52nd-tallest building in the United States. Tallest residential building in the United States outside of New York or Chicago. Tallest building completed in Jersey City in the 2020s. Tallest building in New Jersey.[14]
2 30 Hudson Street 40°42′47″N 74°02′02″W / 40.713009°N 74.033852°W / 40.713009; -74.033852 (30 Hudson Street) 781 (238.1) 42 2004 Office Tallest building in Jersey City and the state of New Jersey from 2004 to 2018. Tallest office building in Jersey City. Was the tallest building in the United States that was not located in its metropolitan area's largest city from 2004 to 2020. Tallest building completed in Jersey City in the 2000s.[15][16][17]
3 Journal Squared Tower 2 40°43′56″N 74°03′39″W / 40.732151°N 74.060753°W / 40.732151; -74.060753 (Journal Squared Tower 2) 754 (229.8) 68 2021 Residential Part of the three-tower Journal Squared complex. Tallest building in Journal Square.[18]
4 The Journal Tower I 40°43′51″N 74°03′48″W / 40.7309711°N 74.0633894°W / 40.7309711; -74.0633894 (One Journal Square Tower I) 710 (216.4) 64 2025 Residential Part of the two-tower The Journal complex.[19][20][21][22] Formerly known as One Journal Square.[23]
5 The Journal Tower II 40°43′53″N 74°03′49″W / 40.7314965°N 74.063582°W / 40.7314965; -74.063582 (One Journal Square Tower II) 710 (216.4) 64 2025 Residential Part of the two-tower The Journal complex.[19][21][22][24] Formerly known as One Journal Square.[23]
6 Sable 40°43′13″N 74°02′05″W / 40.720371°N 74.034821°W / 40.720371; -74.034821 (Sable) 700 (213.5) 70 2016 Residential Formerly known as Jersey City Urby until April 2025. Also known as URL Harborside Tower I. Part of the planned three-tower Urby complex.[25][26]
7 55 Hudson 40°42′50″N 74°02′07″W / 40.713913°N 74.035408°W / 40.713913; -74.035408 (55 Hudson) 649 (197.8) 57 2027 Residential Part of a two-tower complex with 50 Hudson Street.[27][28][29][30]
8 420 Marin Boulevard 40°43′27″N 74°02′24″W / 40.724073°N 74.039923°W / 40.724073; -74.039923 (400-420 Marin Boulevard) 634 (193.2) 60 2026 Residential Phase 2 of the Hudson Exchange development plan.[31][32]
9 Journal Squared Tower 3 40°43′57″N 74°03′37″W / 40.732388°N 74.06014°W / 40.732388; -74.06014 (Journal Squared Tower 3) 633 (193) 60 2024 Residential Part of the three-tower Journal Squared complex.[33][34]
10 Haus25 40°43′04″N 74°02′19″W / 40.71776°N 74.03848°W / 40.71776; -74.03848 (Haus25) 626 (190.8) 57 2022 Residential [35]
11 Journal Squared Tower 1 40°43′57″N 74°03′40″W / 40.732524°N 74.061225°W / 40.732524; -74.061225 (Journal Squared Tower 1) 574 (175) 53 2016 Residential Part of the three-tower Journal Squared complex.[36][37][38]
12 505 Summit 40°43′53″N 74°03′39″W / 40.731346°N 74.06093°W / 40.731346; -74.06093 (505 Summit) 569 (173.5) 53 2026 Residential Previously known as Pathside Tower.[39][40][41]
13 101 Hudson Street 40°42′58″N 74°02′06″W / 40.71608°N 74.035095°W / 40.71608; -74.035095 (101 Hudson Street) 548 (167) 42 1992 Office Tallest building in Jersey City from 1992 to 2004. Tallest building completed in Jersey City in the 1990s.[42][43]
14 235 Grand Street 40°42′56″N 74°02′40″W / 40.715534°N 74.044479°W / 40.715534; -74.044479 (235 Grand Street) 537 (163.7) 45 2019 Residential [44]
15 Trump Plaza 40°43′11″N 74°02′11″W / 40.719707°N 74.036407°W / 40.719707; -74.036407 (Trump Plaza) 532 (162.2) 55 2008 Residential [45][46]
16 Newport Tower 40°43′37″N 74°02′08″W / 40.72691°N 74.035637°W / 40.72691; -74.035637 (Newport Tower) 531 (161.9) 37 1990 Office Briefly the tallest building in Jersey City from 1990 to 1992.[47][48]
17 70 Columbus 40°43′08″N 74°02′25″W / 40.719025°N 74.04039°W / 40.719025; -74.04039 (70 Columbus) 530 (161.4) 50 2015 Residential [49][50]
18 90 Columbus 40°43′10″N 74°02′27″W / 40.719486°N 74.040901°W / 40.719486; -74.040901 (90 Columbus) 530 (161.4) 50 2018 Residential [51]
19 Exchange Place Centre 40°43′00″N 74°02′00″W / 40.716652°N 74.033241°W / 40.716652; -74.033241 (Exchange Place Centre) 515 (157.1) 32 1990 Office Briefly the tallest building in Jersey City in 1990.[52][53]
20 77 Hudson Street 40°42′53″N 74°02′06″W / 40.714603°N 74.03495°W / 40.714603; -74.03495 (77 Hudson Street) 509 (155.1) 48 2010 Residential Also known as Hudson Green East Tower.[54]
21 Monaco North 40°43′27″N 74°02′11″W / 40.724232°N 74.036331°W / 40.724232; -74.036331 (Monaco North) 509 (155.1) 47 2011 Residential [55]
22 Monaco South 40°43′27″N 74°02′12″W / 40.724033°N 74.036804°W / 40.724033; -74.036804 (Monaco South) 509 (155.1) 47 2011 Residential [56]
23 70 Greene Street 40°42′53″N 74°02′09″W / 40.714733°N 74.035774°W / 40.714733; -74.035774 (70 Greene Street) 501 (152.8) 48 2010 Residential Also known as Hudson Green West Tower.[57]
24 Trump Bay Street 40°43′12″N 74°02′08″W / 40.719894°N 74.035522°W / 40.719894; -74.035522 (Trump Bay Street) 484 (147.5) 50 2017 Residential [58]
25 Harborside Plaza 5 40°43′08″N 74°02′05″W / 40.718754°N 74.034798°W / 40.718754; -74.034798 (Harborside Plaza 5) 480 (146.3) 34 2002 Office [59][60]
26 480 Washington Boulevard 40°43′30″N 74°02′05″W / 40.724865°N 74.034683°W / 40.724865; -74.034683 (480 Washington Boulevard) 461 (140.5) 32 2004 Office Also known as Newport Office Center VII.[61]
27 The Hendrix 40°43′14″N 74°02′29″W / 40.720646°N 74.041496°W / 40.720646; -74.041496 (The Hendrix) 460 (140)[a] 41 2022 Residential Formerly known as MGM Marin Blvd, also known as 184 Morgan Street, and 331 Marin Boulevard.[62][63]
28 M2 40°43′20″N 74°02′13″W / 40.72212°N 74.0368674°W / 40.72212; -74.0368674 (M2) 450 (137.2) 38 2016 Residential Part of The BLVD Collection complex.[64]
29 Ellipse 40°43′51″N 74°01′49″W / 40.730885°N 74.030151°W / 40.730885; -74.030151 (Ellipse) 445 (135.5) 43 2017 Residential [65]
30 Vantage Tower One 40°42′49″N 74°02′41″W / 40.713554°N 74.044601°W / 40.713554; -74.044601 (Vantage Tower One) 440 (134.1) 44 2017 Residential [66][67]
31 Vantage Tower Two 40°42′48″N 74°02′37″W / 40.713467°N 74.043564°W / 40.713467; -74.043564 (Vantage Tower Two) 440 (134.1) 44 2021 Residential [68][67]
32 Crystal Point 40°43′18″N 74°01′55″W / 40.721596°N 74.031815°W / 40.721596; -74.031815 (Crystal Point) 436 (132.9) 42 2009 Residential [69]
33 Marbella Apartments 40°43′22″N 74°02′12″W / 40.722767°N 74.036705°W / 40.722767; -74.036705 (Marbella Apartments) 427 (130.2) 40 2003 Residential Tallest residential tower in Jersey City upon completion.[70][71][72]
34 Park and Shore 40°43′51″N 74°02′00″W / 40.730896°N 74.033404°W / 40.730896; -74.033404 (Park and Shore) 414 (126.2) 37 2020 Residential Also known as 75 Park Lane South.[73]
35 50 Columbus 40°43′07″N 74°02′20″W / 40.718727°N 74.039009°W / 40.718727; -74.039009 (50 Columbus) 413 (125.9) 36 2007 Residential [74]
36 88 Regent St 40°42′56″N 74°02′57″W / 40.715503°N 74.049096°W / 40.715503; -74.049096 (88 Regent St) 407 (124)[a] 34 2022 Residential [75]
37 351 Marin Boulevard 40°43′17″N 74°02′29″W / 40.721277°N 74.04138°W / 40.721277; -74.04138 (351 Marin Boulevard) 401 (122.1) 38 2022 Residential [76]
38 VYV North 40°43′28″N 74°02′16″W / 40.724335°N 74.037804°W / 40.724335; -74.037804 (VYV North) 389 (118.6) 35 2017 Residential [77]
39 VYV South 40°43′25″N 74°02′15″W / 40.723518°N 74.037491°W / 40.723518; -74.037491 (VYV South) 389 (118.6) 35 2017 Residential [77]
40 151 Bay Street at Provost Square 40°43′14″N 74°02′24″W / 40.720503°N 74.04002°W / 40.720503; -74.04002 (151 Bay Street at Provost Square) 384 (117)[a] 33 2024 Residential [78]
41 The Morgan at Provost Square 40°43′13″N 74°02′27″W / 40.720259°N 74.0407174°W / 40.720259; -74.0407174 (The Morgan at Provost Square) 383 (116.7) 38 2015 Residential [79]
42 Liberty View Towers East 40°42′48″N 74°02′07″W / 40.713196°N 74.035164°W / 40.713196; -74.035164 (iberty View Towers East) 380 (115.8) 36 2002 Residential [80]
43 Liberty View Towers West 40°42′48″N 74°02′10″W / 40.713326°N 74.036034°W / 40.713326; -74.036034 (Liberty View Towers West) 380 (115.8) 38 2002 Residential [81]
44 The One 40°43′18″N 74°02′16″W / 40.721581°N 74.03788°W / 40.721581; -74.03788 (The One) 375 (114.3) 35 2015 Residential [82]
45 545 Washington Boulevard 40°43′40″N 74°02′06″W / 40.72778°N 74.035117°W / 40.72778; -74.035117 (545 Washington Boulevard) 371 (113) 21 2001 Office Also known as Newport Office Center IV.[83]
46 A Condominiums 40°43′18″N 74°02′13″W / 40.721577°N 74.03681°W / 40.721577; -74.03681 (A Condominiums) 365 (111.3) 33 2008 Residential [84]
47 Bisby at Newport 40°43′56″N 74°01′56″W / 40.7321816°N 74.03214°W / 40.7321816; -74.03214 (Bisby at Newport) 350 (106.7) 33 2024 Residential [85]
48 Southampton Apartments 40°43′39″N 74°01′54″W / 40.727417°N 74.031693°W / 40.727417; -74.031693 (Southampton Apartments) 346 (105.5) 36 2000 Residential [86]
49 The Atlantic 40°43′36″N 74°01′51″W / 40.72665°N 74.03083°W / 40.72665; -74.03083 (The Atlantic) 344 (104.8) 35 1998 Residential [87]
50 Hudson House East 40°43′57″N 74°02′47″W / 40.732475°N 74.046466°W / 40.732475; -74.046466 (Hudson House East) 335 (102)[a] 25 2021 Residential [88]
51 Aquablu 40°43′49″N 74°01′54″W / 40.730213°N 74.031578°W / 40.730213; -74.031578 (Aquablu) 330 (100.6) 33 2009 Residential [89]
52 575 Washington Boulevard 40°43′44″N 74°02′07″W / 40.728782°N 74.035317°W / 40.728782; -74.035317 (575 Washington Boulevard) 330 (100) 21 2001 Office [90]
53 Hudson House West 40°43′57″N 74°02′50″W / 40.73262°N 74.047287°W / 40.73262; -74.047287 (Hudson House West) 322 (98)[a] 25 2021 Residential [88]
54 100 Clifton Place 40°43′16″N 74°03′51″W / 40.72106°N 74.064056°W / 40.72106; -74.064056 (100 Clifton Place) 320 (97.5) 22 1936 Residential Tallest building in Jersey City from 1936 to 1990.[91]
55 East Hampton 40°43′40″N 74°01′51″W / 40.727669°N 74.030952°W / 40.727669; -74.030952 (East Hampton) 320 (97.5) 32 1999 Residential [92]
56 The Riverside 40°43′36″N 74°01′55″W / 40.726616°N 74.031807°W / 40.726616; -74.031807 (The Riverside) 318 (97) 32 1998 Residential [93]
57 The James Monroe 40°43′42″N 74°02′00″W / 40.728256°N 74.033447°W / 40.728256; -74.033447 (The James Monroe) 312 (95.1) 34 1988 Residential [94]
58 Cast Iron Lofts II 40°44′04″N 74°02′43″W / 40.7344505°N 74.0453814°W / 40.7344505; -74.0453814 (Cast Iron Lofts II) 312 (95)[a] 27 2016 Residential [95][96]
59 10 Provost 40°43′12″N 74°02′20″W / 40.72011°N 74.038934°W / 40.72011; -74.038934 (10 Provost) 308 (94)[a] 28 2018 Residential [97]
60 Plaza 10 40°43′15″N 74°01′55″W / 40.72086°N 74.03197°W / 40.72086; -74.03197 (Plaza 10) 308 (94)[a] 19 2002 Office [98]
61 425 Summit Avenue 40°43′48″N 74°03′43″W / 40.730072°N 74.0618365°W / 40.730072; -74.0618365 (425 Summit Avenue) 305 (93)[a] 26 2024 Residential [99]
62 Grove Point Apartments 40°43′11″N 74°02′30″W / 40.719674°N 74.04158°W / 40.719674; -74.04158 (Grove Point Apartments) 305 (93)[a] 29 2007 Residential [100]
63 International Financial Tower 40°43′08″N 74°02′32″W / 40.718788°N 74.042084°W / 40.718788; -74.042084 (International Financial Tower) 303 (92.4) 19 1989 Office [101]
  1. This building's height is not available from the CTBUH. The stated height was determined using Google Earth and is accurate to the nearest meter (approximately three feet).

Tallest under construction or approved

Under construction

This table lists buildings under construction in Jersey City that are expected to be at least 300 ft (91 m) tall, as of 2026. The "Year" column indicates the estimated year of completion. A dash “–“ indicates information about the building is unknown or has not been released.

Name Height
ft (m)
Floors Year Notes
Harborside 8 708 (216) 68 Part of the larger Harborside complex.[102][103][104]
Harborside 4 685 (209) 55 2029 Part of the larger Harborside complex.[105][106]
Imperial Tower 637 (194) 56 Originally approved as a 35 story building. Construction started on foundation and lower floors then paused.[107] In 2025, approved to expand to 56 stories with structural modifications to the existing five-story podium.[108]
808 Pavonia Avenue Building 1 560 (171) 49 2027 Also known as 813 Pavonia Avenue.[109][110][111]
20 Long Slip 526 (160) 47 2027 [112][113][114]
50 Hudson 476 (145) 42 Part of a two-tower complex. Will begin construction when 55 Hudson is completed.[115][27]
Homestead Gateway 402 (123) 34 Also known as 701 Newark Avenue.[116][117]

Approved

This table lists approved buildings in Jersey City that are expected to be at least 300 ft (91 m) tall as of 2026, based on standard height measurement. A dash “–“ indicates information about the building is unknown or has not been released.

Name Height
ft (m)
Floors Notes
Avalon Tower 722 (220) 70 Would be the fourth tallest building in both New Jersey and Jersey City upon completion.[118]
30 Journal Square 718 (219) 68 Developer granted five year approval extension in 2022.[119][120]
Jersey City Urby Tower 2 677 (206) 69 Part of the three-tower Urby complex.[121]
Jersey City Urby Tower 3 677 (206) 69 Part of the three-tower Urby complex.[121]
72 Montgomery Street 648 (198) 56 [122]
808 Pavonia Avenue Building 4 620 (189) 55 [109][110]
Harborside 9 607 (185) 57 Part of the larger Harborside complex.[123][104]
560 Marin Boulevard 59 Approved in 2017.[124] A three-year extension of the approval granted in 2021.[125][126]
580 Marin Boulevard 57 Approved in 2017.[124] A three-year extension of the approval granted in 2021.[125][126]
500 Summit 42 Rights to develop were being bid for in April 2024.[127]

Timeline of tallest buildings

Name Image Street address Years as tallest Height
ft (m)
Floors Reference
Labor Bank Building[ii] 26 Journal Square 1928–1931 180 (55) 15 [5]
The Orpheum 50 Baldwin Avenue 1931–1936 295 (90) 20 [128]
B.S. Pollack Hospital 100 Clifton Place 1936–1990 320 (98) 22 [129]
Exchange Place Center 10 Exchange Place 1990 515 (157) 30 [130][53]
Newport Tower 525 Washington Boulevard 1990–1992 531 (162) 36 [48]
101 Hudson Street 101 Hudson Street 1992–2004 548 (167) 42 [43]
30 Hudson Street 30 Hudson Street 2004–2020 781 (238) 42 [16]
99 Hudson Street 99 Hudson Street 2020–present 889 (271) 76 [14]

Skylines

Notes

  1. Topped-out
  2. This building was originally known as the Labor Bank Building, but has since been renamed 26 Journal Square.

See also

References

General
Specific
  1. "United States". Emporis. Archived from the original on February 13, 2022.
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  7. "In the Region /New Jersey; New Rentals to Blend With Jersey City Brownstones". The New York Times. June 20, 1999.
  8. McGay, Maddie. "North Jersey city to see the region's third-highest number of new apartment units in 2024". North Jersey Media Group.
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  10. Maglione, Francesca (July 10, 2024). "Jersey City's Luxury Housing Boom Fuel's Pitch for 'Soho West'".
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  21. "Kushner nears topping out of first tower, start of second phase for One Journal Square project – Real Estate NJ". re-nj.com.
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  23. Journal, Ron Zeitlinger | The Jersey (November 13, 2024). "64-story Jersey City twin towers project, nearing completion, is branded 'The Journal'". nj.
  24. "One Journal Square Tower II - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com.
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  27. Fry, Chris (October 12, 2023). "Construction to Start on 1,000-Unit Development Along Jersey City Waterfront". Jersey Digs.
  28. Fry, Chris (December 5, 2023). "Jersey City's 55 Hudson Street Nabs $300 Million Construction Loan". Jersey Digs.
  29. "Planning Board Application - P2024-0040 55 Hudson St 2024 Architectural Plan". Jersey City Planning Board.
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  32. "400-420 Marin Boulevard - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com.
  33. "KRE Group breaks ground on Journal Squared's third tower, shows off second tower views". The Jersey Journal. October 6, 2021.
  34. Fry, Chris (May 22, 2023). "Third 60-Story Tower of Journal Squared Tops Out in Jersey City". Jersey Digs.
  35. Young, Micael (April 27, 2022). "Haus25 Completes Construction At 25 Columbus Drive In Jersey City". New York YIMBY.
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  37. "Journal Squared's first Jersey City tower will rent from S1,800". NY.Curbed.com. January 25, 2017. Archived from the original on January 28, 2017.
  38. "First Journal Squared tower should be finished by end of 2016". NJBiz.com. January 5, 2016. Archived from the original on February 2, 2017.
  39. Fry, Chris (August 30, 2023). "605-Unit Pathside Tower in Jersey City Secures $193M Financing as Work Begins". Jersey Digs.
  40. Fry, Chris (May 29, 2025). "505 Summit, a 54-Story Tower, Tops Out in Jersey City". Jersey Digs.
  41. "505 Summit - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com.
  42. "101 Hudson Street". Emporis.com. Archived from the original on February 21, 2007.
  43. "101 Hudson Street". Skyscraperpage.com. Archived from the original on May 6, 2008.
  44. "235 Grand Street". Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat.
  45. "Trump Plaza I". Emporis.com.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  46. "Trump Plaza I". SkyscraperPage.com. Archived from the original on May 6, 2008.
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