BERGEN COUNTY Immobili e case

A County of Vision. A Region of History.

Curious What Your Home is Worth?

Stai pensando di acquistare o investire nel settore immobiliare della contea di Bergen?

Modulo di valutazione per la casa della contea di Bergen

BERGEN COUNTY Immobili e case

A County of Vision. A Region of History.

Curious What Your Home is Worth?

Stai pensando di acquistare o investire nel settore immobiliare della contea di Bergen?

Curious What Your Hone is Worth?

Is Bergen County a Buyers or Seller Market?

Scoprilo in questo dettagliato rapporto sul mercato immobiliare della contea di Bergen che comprende: Riepilogo e revisione del mercato, Case vendute per prezzo, Giorni di mercato per prezzo, Valori di casa mediani e molto altro.

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Bergen County is the most populous county in the U.S. state of New Jersey. As of the 2018 Census estimate, the county's population was 936,692, an increase of 3.5% from the 2010 census, which in turn represented an increase of 20,998 (2.4%) from the 884,118 counted in the 2000 Census. Located in the northeastern corner of New Jersey and its Gateway Region, Bergen County is part of the New York City Metropolitan Area and is directly across the Hudson River from Manhattan, to which it is connected by the George Washington Bridge.

Bergen County is divided into 70 municipalities, but has no large cities. Its most populous place, with 43,010 residents at the time of the 2010 census, is Hackensack, which is also its county seat. Mahwah covered the largest area of any municipality, at 26.19 square mile.

In 2015, the county had a per capita personal income of $75,849, the fourth-highest in New Jersey and ranked 45th of 3,113 counties in the United States. Bergen County is one of the wealthiest counties in the United States, with a median household income of $81,708 per the 2010 Census, increasing to an estimated $84,677 in 2014, which was almost 18% higher than the $71,919 median statewide. The county hosts an extensive park system totaling nearly 9,000 acres.

Transportation

Glen Rock–Boro Hall station. The borough of Glen Rock is served by both the Bergen County Line (above) and the Main Line of the NJ Transit public transportation system.

The George Washington Bridge, connecting Fort Lee  in Bergen County across the Hudson River to New York City. Bergen County has a well-developed road network, including the northern termini of the New Jersey Turnpike (a portion of Interstate 95) and the Garden State Parkway, the eastern terminus of Interstate 80, and a portion of Interstate 287. US Highways 1/9, 9W, 46, 202, and New Jersey state highways 3, 4, 17, 120, 208, and the Palisades Interstate Parkway also serve the region. With an average volume of 210,000 vehicles passing through each day, the intersection of Routes 4 and 17 is one of the busiest in the world.

Access to New York City is alternatively available for motorists through the Lincoln Tunnel and Holland Tunnel in Hudson County. Access across the Hudson River to Westchester County in New York is available using the Tappan Zee Bridge in neighboring Rockland County, New York.

As of May 2010, the county had a total of 2,988.59 miles (4,809.67 km) of roadways, of which 2,402.78 miles (3,866.90 km) are maintained by the municipality, 438.97 miles (706.45 km) by Bergen County, 106.69 miles (171.70 km) by the New Jersey Department of Transportation and 40.15 miles (64.62 km) by the New Jersey Turnpike Authority.

Train service is available on three lines from NJ Transit: the Bergen County Line, the Main Line, and the Pascack Valley Line. They run north–south to Hoboken Terminal with connections to the PATH train. NJ Transit also offers connecting service to New York Penn Station and Newark Penn Station at Secaucus Junction. Connections are also available at Hoboken Terminal to the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail and New York Waterways ferry service to the World Financial Center and other destinations.

The traffic intersection of Route 17 and Route 4 in Paramus is one of the busiest in the world.
Despite the name, the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail does not yet run into Bergen County, although a northward extension from Hudson County to Englewood Hospital and Medical Center, known as the Northern Branch Corridor Project, has been advanced to the draft environmental impact statement stage by NJ Transit. The proposed Passaic-Bergen Rail Line, with two station stops in Hackensack, has not advanced since its 2008 announcement. The Access to the Region's Core rail tunnel project would have allowed many Bergen County railway commuters a one-seat ride into Manhattan but was canceled in October 2010.

Local and express bus service is available from NJ Transit and private companies such as Academy Bus Lines, Coach USA, DeCamp Bus Lines and Red and Tan Lines, offering transport within Bergen County, elsewhere in New Jersey, and to the Port Authority Bus Terminal and George Washington Bridge Bus Station in New York City. In studies conducted to determine the best possible routes for the Bergen BRT (bus rapid transit) system, it has been determined the many malls and other "activity generators" in the vicinity of the intersection of routes 4 and 17 would constitute the core of any system. While no funding has for construction of the project has been identified, a study begun in 2012 will define the optimal routes.

There is one airport in the county, Teterboro Airport in Teterboro, which is operated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. The three busiest commercial airports in the New York City metropolitan area, namely JFK International Airport, Newark Liberty International Airport, and La Guardia Airport, are all located within 25 miles of Bergen County.

Education
Bergen County is home to several colleges and universities:
  • Bergen Community College – Paramus, with other centers in Hackensack and Lyndhurst
  • Fairleigh Dickinson University – Teaneck and Hackensack
  • Felician University – Lodi and Rutherford
  • Ramapo College – Mahwah
  • Saint Peter's University – Englewood Cliffs
Bergen has some 45 public high schools and at least 23 private high schools. Three of the top ten municipal high schools out of 339 schools in New Jersey were located in Bergen County, according to a 2014 ranking by New Jersey Monthly magazine, including Northern Highlands Regional High School in Allendale (#3), Pascack Hills High School in Montvale (#7), and Glen Rock High School in Glen Rock (#8). The magazine's list did not include the Bergen County Academies (BCA), which as the county's public magnet high school in Hackensack has continued to be recognized by various rankings as one of the best high schools in the United States. In 2014, BCA had an average HSPA score of 294 out of 300 and an average SAT score of 2103 out of 2400.

Arts and Culture
The Bergen Performing Arts Center (PAC) is based in Englewood, while numerous museums are located throughout the county. In September 2014, the Englewood-based Northern New Jersey Community Foundation announced an initiative known as ArtsBergen, a centralizing body with the goal of connecting artists and arts organizations with one another in Bergen County

Municipalities
Today there are 70 municipalities in Bergen County. In the last decades of the 19th century, Bergen County, to a far greater extent than any other county in the state, began dividing its townships up into incorporated boroughs; this was chiefly due to the "boroughitis" phenomenon, triggered by a number of loopholes in state laws that allowed boroughs to levy lower taxes and send more members to the county's board of freeholders. There was a 10-year period in which many of Bergen County's townships disappeared into the patchwork of boroughs that exist today, before the state laws governing municipal incorporation were changed.

Historical Municipalities
Over the history of the county, there have been various municipality secessions, annexations and renamings. The following is a partial list of former municipalities, ordered by year of incorporation.
  • Bergen Township, 1683–1862
  • Hackensack Township, 1693
  • New Barbadoes Township, 1710–1921
  • Saddle River Township, 1716–1955
  • Franklin Township, 1771–1926
  • Harrington Township, 1775–1916
  • Lodi Township, 1825–1935
  • Hohokus Township, 1849
  • Union Township, 1852
  • Midland Township, 1871
  • Englewood Township, 1871–1899
  • Palisades Township, 1871–1922
  • Ridgefield Township, 1871
  • Ridgewood Township, 1876
  • Orvil Township, 1886–1919
  • Boiling Springs Township, 1885
  • Bergen Township, 1893–1902
  • Eastwood Borough, 1894–1896
  • Overpeck Township, 1897–1938

Economy
Based on data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, Bergen County had a gross domestic product (GDP) of $66.1 billion in 2018, which was ranked 1st in the state and represented an increase of 2.6% from the previous year.

Largest Employers
According to the Bergen County Economic Development Corporation, the largest employers in Bergen County as of November 2012, as ranked with at least 1,000 employees in the county, were as follows:
  • Hackensack University Medical Center, Hackensack, 8,000
  • Valley Health System, Ridgewood, 4,660
  • Bio-Reference Laboratories, Inc., Elmwood Park, 2,900
  • Medco Health Solutions, Franklin Lakes, 2,800 
  • County of Bergen, Hackensack, 2,390
  • Quest Diagnostics, Teterboro / Lyndhurst, 2,200
  • KPMG, Montvale, 2,100
  • Englewood Hospital and Medical Center, Englewood, 2,002
  • Englewood Hospital Home Health Care Services, Englewood, 1,985
  • Unilever Bestfoods, Englewood Cliffs, 1,900
  • Stryker Corporation, Allendale / Mahwah, 1,812
  • Bergen Regional Medical Center, Paramus, 1,746
  • Holy Name Medical Center, Teaneck, 1,695
  • Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, 1,500
  • Crestron Electronics, Rockleigh / Cresskill, 1,500
  • BMW of North America, Woodcliff Lake, 1,000

Retail
The retail industry, anchored in Paramus, is a mainstay of the Bergen County economy, with a combined payroll of $1.7 billion as of 2012

Points of Interest
  • New Jersey Naval Museum, Hackensack. At the museum, the USS Ling is moored in the Hackensack River and is available for tours as a museum ship.
  • Aviation Hall of Fame and Museum of New Jersey, located at Teterboro Airport in Teterboro.
  • Bergen Museum of Art & Science, Hackensack.
  • Buehler Challenger & Science Center, Paramus — Located on the campus of Bergen Community College.
  • Meadowlands Environment Center, Lyndhurst.
  • Tenafly Nature Center, Tenafly
  • Puffin Foundation, Teaneck
  • Maywood Station Museum, Maywood
  • Bergen Performing Arts Center, Englewood
  • MetLife Stadium, which replaced Giants Stadium, in East Rutherford, is the home of the New York Giants and the New York Jets of the National Football League. At a construction cost of approximately $1.6 billion, it is the most expensive stadium ever built.
  • Meadowlands Arena, East Rutherford (formerly known as the Izod Center, Continental Airlines Arena and the Brendan Byrne Arena). Opened in 1981, it was formerly home to the New Jersey Devils of the National Hockey League, the New Jersey Nets of the National Basketball Association, and the Seton Hall University Pirates men's basketball team. The arena closed on April 3, 2015.
  • Meadowlands Racetrack, East Rutherford
  • Westfield Garden State Plaza, Paramus, is one of the largest and highest revenue producing shopping malls in the United States.
  • The Shops at Riverside, shopping mall, Hackensack (formerly known as Riverside Square Mall)
  • Paramus Park, shopping mall, Paramus
  • The Outlets at Bergen Town Center, shopping mall, Paramus (formerly known as the Bergen Mall)
  • Fashion Center, shopping mall, Paramus
  • H Mart, Asian shopping plaza and supermarket, Ridgefield
  • Mitsuwa Marketplace, Japanese shopping plaza and supermarket, Edgewater
  • American Dream Meadowlands, retail and entertainment complex that opened on October 25, 2019
Parks
  • Ramapo Mountain State Forest, Mahwah
  • Palisades Interstate Park, Fort Lee, Englewood Cliffs, Tenafly, Alpine
  • Belmont Hill County Park, Garfield
  • Campgaw Mountain Reservation, Mahwah
  • Dahnert's Lake County Park, Garfield
  • Darlington County Park, Mahwah
  • McFaul Environmental Center, Wyckoff
  • Ramapo Valley County Reservation, Mahwah
  • Overpeck County Park, Leonia, Palisades Park, Ridgefield Park
  • Riverside County Park, Lyndhurst, North Arlington
  • Pascack Brook County Park, Westwood
  • Saddle Ridge Riding Area, Franklin Lakes
  • Saddle River County Park, Paramus, Glen Rock, Rochelle Park, Saddle Brook, Ridgewood
  • Samuel Nelkin County Park, Wallington
  • Van Saun County Park, Paramus, including the Bergen County Zoological Park, the county's only zoo. The zoo was slated for an expansion as of 2016 which would nearly double its size from 12 to 23 acres and significantly diversify its population of animal species
  • Wood Dale County Park, Woodcliff Lake

Historical Sites
  • New Bridge Landing, River Edge, Teaneck and New Milford
  • The Hermitage, Ho-Ho-Kus
  • Steuben House, River Edge (at New Bridge Landing)
  • Baylor Massacre site, River Vale — location of a surprise attack on September 27, 1778, against the 3rd Regiment of Continental Light Dragoons under the command of Colonel George Baylor during the American Revolutionary War
  • Camp Merritt, Cresskill
  • Campbell-Christie House, River Edge — a historic Dutch sandstone home, it was moved from New Milford to preserve the home from destruction.
  • Easton Tower, Paramus
  • Garretson Farm, Fair Lawn — a stone home dating to the 1720s that is one of the county's oldest surviving structures.
  • Gethsemane Cemetery, Little Ferry
  • Washington Spring Garden, located in Van Saun Park, Paramus
  • Wortendyke Barn, Park Ridge

GENERAL INFO

Popolazione: 932.202

Distance to NYC: 1.5 mi.

Densità / Miglio della popolazione: 3.700 / sq mi

Età media: 42 anni

Number of Households: 330,817

Households with Children: 235,210 

Median Household Income: $81,708

Sede della contea: Hackensack

Address: One Bergen County Plaza

Phone Number: 201-336-6000

Town Website: http://www.co.bergen.nj.us/

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