Traffic & Transit
Essex-Hudson Greenway Update: Groundbreaking Expected In 2025
The sprawling hike/bike path will cross through Bloomfield, Belleville, Glen Ridge, Jersey City, Kearny, Montclair, Newark and Secaucus.
ESSEX COUNTY, NJ — A fresh progress update on the long-awaited Essex-Hudson Greenway in North Jersey is coming later this week, officials say.
The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) will host an open house on Wednesday, Nov. 13 to update the public on the first portion of the greenway’s development. The event will take place from 6 to 8 p.m. at Park Elementary School, 120 Manchester Place in Newark. Spanish translation services will be available.
A groundbreaking for the first portion of the greenway is expected in 2025, NJDEP officials say.
Find out what's happening in Newarkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
New Jersey turned heads three years ago when officials announced that it will be creating its first new state park in more than a decade. Read More: NJ Will Turn Old Railway Into Huge 'Greenway' For Hiking, Biking
Dubbed the “Essex-Hudson Greenway,” the project will transform an old, defunct nine-mile railroad line into a 100-foot-wide biking and hiking path. The ambitious project will cross above the Passaic and Hackensack rivers and pass through eight towns: Bloomfield, Belleville, Glen Ridge, Jersey City, Kearny, Montclair, Newark and Secaucus.
Find out what's happening in Newarkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The area is currently closed to public access. Learn more about the project and its timeline here.
Gov. Phil Murphy and other supporters have said the greenway will be a “game-changer” for people living nearby. However, officials have warned that the project could take years to cross the finish line.
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Work will take place in sections. The first phase of the multimillion-dollar project will focus on a two-mile span in Newark and Kearny, and will impact an estimated 350,000 residents in the two municipalities. Read More: Essex-Hudson Greenway Takes Leap Forward
A groundbreaking for the Newark portion of the greenway project is expected in 2025.
Here’s what to expect during Phase One, according to the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP):
“The Newark-Kearny segment is composed of three project areas. The western section will span from Branch Brook Park to Broadway in Newark. The central section, in Kearny, will begin at Passaic Avenue and go through Forest Street. The eastern section, also in Kearny, will start at Forest Street and run east to the Meadowlands’ edge.”
Potential plans for the first phase include “scenic overlooks” and “community hubs” that will connect Newark and Kearny, and give visitors some stunning views of the Meadowlands and Manhattan skyline.

BUILDING A GREENWAY
Supporters say the greenway will give residents and visitors in one of the most densely populated areas of the state a place to ride a bicycle or take a leisurely walk outdoors. It would also give New Jersey commuters another way to hop aboard mass transit headed to New York City, helping to relieve traffic congestion in the area and reduce pollution.
Other proponents of the plan say it will also create "expansive" economic, public health and environmental benefits, such as addressing severe sewer overflow issues that have long plagued homeowners and communities along the proposed route.
The greenway will follow the right-of-way of the eastern portion of NJ Transit’s former Boonton Line. Passenger service was discontinued on this portion of the line in 2002. Following termination of NJ Transit’s commuter service, limited freight service continued until the last rail customer ceased operations in 2015.
Murphy announced the acquisition of the greenway in September 2022. Since then, the NJDEP – along with its interagency partners at the New Jersey Economic Development Authority, NJ TRANSIT, and New Jersey Department of Transportation – have been working to bring the “once-in-a-generation project” to life.
The initial development and construction of the greenway will be funded through a combination of state and federal appropriations, the NJDEP said.
When it’s complete, the greenway will connect to nearly 1.5 million people – more than 16 percent of New Jersey’s population.
- See Related: Essex-Hudson Greenway Closer But Work May Take Years, Officials Say
- See Related: Cheers In Essex County For Huge Hiking, Biking 'Greenway'
- See Related: Poetry Amid Decay: NJ Photographer Explores Abandoned Railway
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