Gov. Phil Murphy has thrown his support behind a high-profile redevelopment project in New Brunswick, pledging to create a focal point for research and innovation that will feed sectors such as health care, higher education and technology.
Following demolition last summer and a groundbreaking last fall, a $172 million, mixed-use project anchored by a new performing arts center is quickly rising in downtown New Brunswick.
More than 300 concrete trucks descended on downtown New Brunswick earlier this month for a continuous, 10-hour pour for the landmark New Brunswick Performing Arts Center project.
Several other cities in New Jersey have filed their bids to become the home of Amazon’s second headquarters, despite the state throwing its official support behind Newark earlier this week.
The New Brunswick Development Corp., public officials and a host of other stakeholders broke ground Wednesday on the $172 million New Brunswick Performing Arts Center project. Slated to rise 23 stories on Livingston Avenue, the mixed-use complex stands to transform the city’s famed downtown cultural arts district, spanning 450,000 square feet that will include performance venues, office space and more than 200 luxury apartments.
A rendering of a planned performing arts center in New Brunswick’s cultural center. — Courtesy: ElkusManfredi Architects By Joshua Burd Rutgers University has approved plans to contribute more than a quarter of the $60 million cost to build a new…
New Brunswick Development Corp. expects to begin site construction next month at a planned 1.7 million-square-foot redevelopment project in the heart of the Middlesex County seat.
The demolition of an aging parking structure in New Brunswick is nearly complete, clearing the way for a developer to rebuild the site as a 1.7 million-square-foot transit village.