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Englewood Route 4 station

Englewood, New JerseyHudson-Bergen Light Rail stationsProposed NJ Transit rail stationsRailway stations in Bergen County, New Jersey
2018 07 21 17 10 17 View east along New Jersey State Route 4 just west of the exit for New Jersey State Route 93 and Bergen County Route 501 (Grand Avenue) in Englewood, Bergen County, New Jersey
2018 07 21 17 10 17 View east along New Jersey State Route 4 just west of the exit for New Jersey State Route 93 and Bergen County Route 501 (Grand Avenue) in Englewood, Bergen County, New Jersey

Englewood Route 4 is a proposed station along NJ Transit's Northern Branch Corridor Project extension of Hudson-Bergen Light Rail in Englewood in lower reaches of the Northern Valley in Bergen County, New Jersey. The station site is along the CSX Transportation (CSXT) Northern Branch where it runs under New Jersey Route 4 at MP 8.8, east of Nordhoff Place and north of Sheffield Avenue.The station is designed to have an island platform, partially located under Route 4. It will include a parking deck for 945 vehicles incorporated into a storage and maintenance VBF (vehicle base facility). Vehicle access from Route 4 will be via Grand Avenue (concurrent County Route 501 and New Jersey Route 93). Approximately 6 acres (2.4 ha) of property will acquired to build the parking deck and VBF. Two other HBLR stations are planned in the city further north of Englewood Route 4 at Englewood Town Center and at Englewood Hospital, the line's terminus.The area radiating from the station site has been dubbed Englewood South. It is zoned for planned unit development (PUD) and consists mixed-use development that is undergoing a transformation from a warehouse distribution & manufacturing district into a residential, retail, and business neighborhood.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Englewood Route 4 station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Englewood Route 4 station
Nordhoff Place,

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Wikipedia: Englewood Route 4 stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.880412 ° E -73.98453 °
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Address

Nordhoff Place

Nordhoff Place
07361
New Jersey, United States
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2018 07 21 17 10 17 View east along New Jersey State Route 4 just west of the exit for New Jersey State Route 93 and Bergen County Route 501 (Grand Avenue) in Englewood, Bergen County, New Jersey
2018 07 21 17 10 17 View east along New Jersey State Route 4 just west of the exit for New Jersey State Route 93 and Bergen County Route 501 (Grand Avenue) in Englewood, Bergen County, New Jersey
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1909 U.S. Open (golf)

The 1909 U.S. Open was the fifteenth U.S. Open, held June 24–25 at Englewood Golf Club in Englewood, New Jersey, north of downtown New York City (Manhattan). George Sargent established a new U.S. Open scoring record to win his only major title, four strokes ahead of runner-up Tom McNamara.In the opening round on Thursday morning, David Hunter made U.S. Open history as the first player to break 70, but he had some problems in the second round when he hit his ball into a brook and subsequently used four niblick shots in getting out. After reaching the turn in 47 he made a nice recovery on the back nine and came home in 37 for 84 (he had another 84 in the third round and finished thirtieth). McNamara also had a sub-70 score with 69 in the second round and led by four strokes midway at 142.McNamara carried a two-stroke lead over Sargent into the final round on Friday afternoon. Sargent birdied the final hole for 71 and his third consecutive round of 72 or better. McNamara struggled over the final 18 holes with 77 and finished four back of Sargent. Sargent's winning total of 290 broke the U.S. Open scoring record by five shots. Bob Peebles was well positioned after three rounds on 222 but struggled and fell back into the pack with a final round 78. John McDermott made his U.S. Open debut at age 17 and was 49th. He placed in the top-ten in each of the next five, with consecutive wins in 1911 and 1912, the first American-born champion. Four-time champion Willie Anderson tied for fourth in his penultimate U.S. Open. Horace Rawlins, the inaugural champion fourteen years earlier in 1895, made his last cut in the championship and finished sixtieth.