New Jersey
How restaurants have helped revitalize New Jersey’s Gold Coast
From Fort Lee to Bayonne, restaurants are popping up along New Jersey’s Gold Coast, driving the region’s rebirth.
Faubourg in Monclair offers seasonal French food in a beautiful space.
Chef Olivier Muller talks about the restaurant and what makes their Coq au vin so special.
Anne-Marie Caruso, NorthJersey
Jeremy Casilli started his career in restaurant development in New York City. But driving through North Jersey on his way in from Rockland County, he noticed something: opportunity.
“When I looked at space down in Jersey City, you could literally see tumbleweeds. Someone told me, ‘You don’t understand. This is gonna be the sixth borough,” he said. “But that’s what happened. That area exploded, and just kind of reignited the whole Gold Coast along the water.”
He heeded the advice, opening Pier 115 in Edgewater and Hudson & Co. in Jersey City, among others. His latest restaurant is Drift in Weehawken, and there’s another Gold Coast eatery of his in the works in West New York.
The Gold Coast — the roughly 20-mile stretch from Fort Lee to Bayonne — has swelled in recent years with new residential construction and, in turn, population growth. Restaurants have played a critical role in the redevelopment.
“All these developers have been looking to go to restaurant proprietors to find anchors,” Casilli said. “It’s no longer a department store. If you build a good conglomerate of serious restaurateurs, that is bringing business to them whether they’re trying to fill a mall or they’re trying to fill a vacancy.”
There are, of course, concerns that the rapid influx of higher-end businesses and high rises is pushing communities out. The hope is that restaurants, at least, serve the people that have lived in these changing cities for years.
“The community has always been here,” said Andrew Christianson, director of operations at Blu on the Hudson, which opened in Weehawken in 2023. “It’s just asking us for something different now.”
A renaissance led by restaurants
Gold Coast communities once thrived at the turn and well into the 20th century. Fort Lee was known as the Hollywood of the East, Jersey City was a major railroad hub, Weehawken had casinos and, oddly, a passenger elevator and an amusement park that opened in 1891. It was also (and continues to be) a melting pot of immigrants, first from Europe, then from Asia, now from those and beyond.
But the loss of port, railroad and manufacturing jobs, deindustrialization and increased crime in the mid-20th century sent many of those communities into disrepair. Some cities took longer than others to rebuild. And there are still places working on their comeback.
Since reinvestment in these cities started some 30 years ago, people have been ringing the alarm bells of gentrification’s deleterious effects. The relaxing of rent controls along the Gold Coast and the construction of luxury units in residential areas has forced out many residents.
The average monthly rent in Jersey City is $5,500, more expensive than Manhattan. Bayonne, which may be the slowest of the Gold Coast cities to reinvent itself, has plans underway to build high-rises and a skyline of its own.
There have been efforts to boost affordable housing percentages in these communities, and those who have been a part of the Gold Coast’s renaissance see evidence that thoughtful planning has retained the area’s socioeconomic and cultural diversity. Restaurants are a visible way to see the proof of that, said Emory Edwards, president of the Hudson County Chamber of Commerce.
“Every chef starts with a story,” he said. “This being one of the most diverse places in the U.S., people love to tell their stories through food. I think you’re seeing diversity celebrated at a time when it’s being questioned. I think it’s a natural growth.”
Take Fort Lee for instance, a city that’s been home to Italian, Irish, German, Jewish, Korean and other immigrants over the last century-plus. Go today and you’ll find a wide diversity of restaurants, from casual dim sum to high-end Szechuan, pubs, virtual golf bars, Italian fine dining and much more.
The annual Fort Lee Restaurant Week puts that diversity on a pedestal, said Denis Glennon, vice president of the Fort Lee Business District Alliance, which runs the event. The alliance surveyed restaurant owners last year about why Fort Lee appealed to them to determine, in part, how to manage future growth.
“One of the questions we ask is, ‘Why did you choose Fort Lee?’ The responses are not only consistent, but they’re overwhelmingly positive,” Glennon said before last year’s Restaurant Week. “They do see it as growing, they do see it as diverse, they do see it as upper income, they do see it as progressive, and they see it as a place where things are going on and where things will be going on, and they want to be at the center of it.”
Restaurants have not only driven revenue in Gold Coast communities like Fort Lee, but they also become major employers and have helped to attract other businesses. Restaurants, Edwards said, are the engine for growth, and retaining a diversity of culinary offerings of those restaurants is paramount.
“There has been a lot of change, but one of the exciting things is you see a lot of diversity in the food offerings because it reflects the people who live here,” he said. “You can get anything you want within an hour.”
New avenues to meet a changing population
People are moving to the Gold Coast. From 2012 to 2022, Jersey City’s population rose almost 12%. Hundreds of new apartment buildings have opened, or will soon open, in Weehawken in the last two years. And several massive hotels have opened in Fort Lee, Weehawken and elsewhere.
With those new hotels and apartment buildings come restaurants. These eateries create dining spaces for locals, and draw in people from New York City and beyond. A place like Blu on the Hudson, with picture-perfect skyline views and Wagyu steaks, is worth the trip for many.
“We get such a mix,” Christianson said. “We get everybody from Edgewater, everybody from Weehawken, Jersey City. But then we have an uncanny pull from Philadelphia, New York, Connecticut. We just had people say they drove two hours to come here because, ‘We saw you in this article.’”
He added that while Hoboken may be maxed out on space, “It’s the surrounding community [that] is growing.”
Edwards said part of his job at the Chamber is to curate the experience for people who may not have visited Gold Coast communities in a while (or ever).
“Hudson County, all along the waterfront or inland a bit, people are using the restaurants here. They’re of such quality, and they’re an interesting dynamic that people are coming from across North Jersey,” he said. “When you first come to Hudson County, they may tend to go back and forth [to New York City] but if they live here a little bit, they dig in and look for things in their hometown.”
Faubourg, a French restaurant in Montclair, opened a second location in Weehawken late last year. Partners Dominique Paulin and chef Olivier Muller first came upon the spot some four years ago and appreciated the skyline views it provides and the proximity to New York City.
“We felt like it touched some of our existing customer base but it’s far away from us so we’re not competing with ourselves,” Muller said. “I think it’s a very pretty waterfront. We felt like it was a great location to expand.”
“It was a good location closer to New York, which we wanted,” Paulin adds. “I don’t think we would move to New York, but across from the river is alright.”
The concentration of good restaurants — Weehawken itself welcomed Drift, Faubourg and Blu on the Hudson in the last two years — makes these cities a destination for diners, and also improves the quality of the food, Paulin said.
“We came from the New York scene and worked there for 20 years,” he said. “I think it forces you to be creative and to work at what you do. With new restaurants opening, I think it’ll create a dining scene where people will want to come to Weehawken.”
A variety of causes led to the regrowth of Gold Coast communities — folks being priced out of New York City, the pandemic shifting work spaces, the proximity of public transit and, frankly, the improvement of those cities on the Jersey Coast. While that helped lead to the creation of residential buildings, restaurants and event spaces, the word has gotten around that sitting on a rooftop patio overlooking the New York City skyline with a drink in hand is a worthwhile visit.
That matters to the health of the restaurant scene here: Faubourg Weehawken almost doubles its capacity in summer, and Casilli said that helps offset the costs of running a restaurant in the cold months.
“I look at it like an insurance policy for success,” he said. “Winter takes a nosedive — I don’t know why because all the restaurants are very cozy — but as soon as spring, summer, fall activate, a sea of people come out. That’s why I’ve been focused on rooftop deals and waterfront properties.”
The rebirth of the Gold Coast as a destination is so successful, some are beginning to think of it not as an extension of New York City anymore — it’s just Jersey.
“I really strongly resist the language of being the sixth borough because I think we stand on our own,” Edwards said. “You see a lot of tourism growing. If you look at the hotels along the Hudson River waterfront, they’re staying almost full consistently throughout the year.”
The future of the Gold Coast
For better or worse, the Gold Coast is likely to bring in more people, more buildings and more restaurants. Casilli is opening a more casual eatery in West New York in a space that hasn’t been touched for 20 years. Blu on the Hudson is gearing up for a lively summer with a lineup of live music and events (and they’re opening another location in Livingston later this year).
Edwards, at the Hudson Chamber, is planning for the increased crowds the 2026 World Cup will bring into the region. The hope is all that economic growth comes back to the community that started it.
“I think if you look at New Jersey just in general, this is one of the growing counties,” he said. “This is one of the growing economies. I think there’s a huge opportunity here.”
He’s not alone: The hopes are high up and down the coast for an even more gilded Gold Coast.
“I think we’re going to exceed the posture that we had in the 1960s as being the place to live in Bergen County,” Glennon said of Fort Lee. “More pointedly, the place to live in northern New Jersey and with a little bit of license, one of the great places to live in the New York metropolitan area… I don’t wanna get carried away here.”
Matt Cortina is a food reporter for NorthJersey.com/The Record. Reach him at mcortina@gannett.com.
New Jersey
Newark-bound United flight returns to LA airport for evacuation after reported fire
NEWARK, New Jersey — A United Airlines flight headed to Newark, New Jersey returned to the Los Angeles airport Monday about 40 minutes after taking off for an emergency evacuation after a reported fire, authorities said.
All flights at the LAX International Airport were ordered to remain on the ground for about half an hour during the flight’s return and evacuation, according to advisories from the Federal Aviation Administration. No injuries were reported.
The flight, which was en route to Newark Liberty International Airport returned to LAX to address an issue with one of the engines, the airline said in a statement. There was no mention of a fire, but the LA Fire Department said it responded and there was a fire that was contained as of an hour after the plane’s landing.
The flight took off at 10:43 a.m., began to turn around at about 11 a.m. and landed again at 11:19 a.m., according to flight tracker FlightAware.
The LA Fire Department said they assisted with the evacuation of more than 250 passengers and crew. Passengers exited the plane on the taxiway using slides and stairs and were taken to the terminal, the airline said.
The airplane was a Boeing 787-9, a variant of the popular line of 787 Dreamliner long-haul aircraft.
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New Jersey
Division 3 NCAA Tournament: Three NJ basketball teams make the bracket
Manasquan HS grad Matthew Solomon has special motivation in leading red-hot TCNJ. Montclair State, Stevens also repping the Garden State.
video David Buley’s dunk energizes CBA crowd as Colts win Shore title
David Buley’s dunk in the third quarter energized CBA crowd as Colts won the Shore Conference basketball title in 58-37 rout of Red Bank Catholic.
It was the kind of sequence that embodies everything we love about sports – and especially college basketball.
With 10 seconds left in the Saturday’s New Jersey Athletic Conference Tournament final, TCNJ guard David Alexandre drove the lane, got cut off, spun around a whipped a pass into the paint as he fell backward. There to receive it was forward Matthew Solomon, a Manasquan High School grad, who finished his hard cut with a dunk that gave the Lions a two-point lead at Montclair State.
Then, on the other end, Montclair State star Jacob Morales had a long look at a game-winner with two seconds left – but Solomon closed out and blocked the shot as time expired.
Both teams are headed to the Division III NCAA Tournament, which unveiled its bracket today (so is a third New Jersey representative, Stevens Institute of Technology). It was an incredible moment on its face, so exhilarating that former Villanova coach and two-time March Madness champion Jay Wright spotlighted it on social media.
“That’s surreal,” Solomon said. “I grew up watching Nova, so to see that was really cool. He was giving Division 3 basketball some love, which is deserved.”
One of the best-kept secrets in college sports is just how high-quality D-3 hoops is, and Jersey has long been a hotbed, regularly sending squads to the Final Four. On the men’s side the Garden State’s last national champion was Rowan in 1996. That could change in the coming weeks.
But along with quality hoops, Division 3 ball features amazing stories, and the story behind Solomon’s heroics is even more incredible than jaw-dropping end to Saturday’s classic.
On his left wrist, the 6-foot-7 senior out of Spring Lake Heights wore protective tape over a wristband that read, “Paterno Strong” in honor of his cousin Billy Paterno, who died in 2024 at age 3 of leukemia. His parents, Point Pleasant residents Danielle and William, were at the NJAC title game.
“They’re an amazing family,” Solomon said. “The stuff they went through showed me what real strength looks like. Me facing adversity on the basketball court, when I look over and see them and look down on my wrist and see the Paterno Strong wristband, after what they did, I can keep playing for 40 minutes of basketball.”
Solomon finished the epic final with 22 points and 17 rebounds on 10-of-13 shooting, but he was quick to credit Saddle River Day grad Alexandre (24 points, 4 assists) and ace point guard and Don Bosco Prep grad Nick Koch (14 points) for their contributions.
For some context on the achievement: Montclair State was 24-0 and ranked No. 1 in all of Division 3 when TCNJ beat the Red Hawks twice in three-game span.
“Jersey basketball, you know how it is – the best in the country,” Solomon said. “We got a taste of playing the top team in the country and that definitely prepared us for what’s next, and hopefully we prepared them, so we can both show the whole country what New Jersey basketball is about.”
There’s one more powerful aspect to Solomon’s story. His father Larry Solomon died of Covid in February 2021, and a month later his brother Andrew Solomon hit the game-winning shot with one second left in the Shore Conference A final, capping a perfect season for Manasquan High. Andrew went on to serve as a manager with Monmouth’s basketball program.
“People are trying to compare my shot to his, but Andrew’s got me topped by a million,” Matthew said.
But between his father and his cousin Billy, “I’ve got people watching me from above,” Matthew said. “All the things I do are for them.”
Keep that in mind as TCNJ (21-6 overall, 14-4 NJAC) opens the Division 3 bracket against Johns Hopkins (20-7) Friday Randolph-Macon in Ashland Virginia. The winner will face either host Randolph-Macon (25-3) or North Carolina Wesleyan (21-6) Saturday at the same site.
“We know we can run with the best of them,” Solomon said. “We’re not pleased with just being here now. Maybe the past two years, just making it was enough. This year that’s not enough. We’ve got a special group.”
In a new wrinkle this year, the D-3 quarterfinals, semifinals and final will take place in Indianapolis, sharing a stage with the Division I Final Four. It’s a fitting reward.
“Playing Division 3 basketball has changed my life,” Solomon said. “You’ve really got to love the game, but I’ve built relationships with teammates, coaches and alumni – connections that I’m going to have the rest of my life. If I were to go back to high school, I would make the same exact decision a thousand times out of a thousand.”
Montclair State (25-1, overall, 17-1 NJAC)
The Red Hawks reached No. 1 in the nation after reeling off 24 straight wins to open the campaign. They average 92.1 points per game shooting a whopping 40.4 percent from 3-point range and hitting 13.1 triples per game.
They will play host to Maine-Farmington (22-5) on Friday, and if they win will host the winner of Bates (18-8) vs. Yeshiva (20-8) in the second round on Saturday.
Leading the way is senior forward Jacob Morales, a Montvale native, Pascack Hills High School grad and former Rutgers walk-on. The NJAC Player of the Year averages 19.0 points, 6.0 rebounds and 3.2 assists while shooting 39 percent from 3-point range.
Sophomore guard and Trenton native Kabrien Goss (14.7 ppg), freshman guard and Morris Catholic grad Cristian Nicholson (11.4 ppg) and sophomore forward and Lenape High School grad Myles Primas (9.1 ppg, 4.1 rpg) are key contributors.
Under head coach Justin Potts, the Red Hawks reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament last year and also made the field in 2022-23.
Stevens (18-9 overall, 10-4 MAC Freedom)
The Ducks are four-time MAAC Freedom champions under head coach Bobby Hurley, who won his 300th game at the program’s helm in February.
They will visit Christopher Newport (21-5) in Newport News, Va., on Friday, with the winner advancing to Saturday’s second round at the same site against either Mount Union (23-3) or Washington and Jefferson (22-6).
Junior guard Tommy Scholl, the MAC Freedom MVP, averages 18.1 points and 6.6 rebounds per game. Junior forward Harmehar Chhabra, a South Brunswick High School grad, averages 14.3 points, 6.4 rebounds and 4.7 assists and recorded a triple-double (12 points, 11 boards, 11 assists) against Lebanon Valley last month.
Junior guard Kyle Maddison (14.3 ppg, 3.9 rpg, 4.0 apg) and senior guard Matt Leming out of Haddonfield (9.5 ppg, 3.7 rpg) add to an offense that shoots 47 percent from the field.
This is the program’s fourth NCAA Tournament appearance, all under Hurley. The Ducks reached the second round in 2022.
Jerry Carino has covered the New Jersey sports scene since 1996 and the college basketball beat since 2003. Contact him at jcarino@gannettnj.com.
New Jersey
Blizzard causes heavy damage to New Jersey animal refuge
A New Jersey animal shelter is asking for the public’s help after last month’s blizzard did heavy damage to its property in Ocean County.
On social media, Popcorn Park Animal Refuge posted a video and described the fury of the storm. saying that the blizzard “caused unexpected damage… impacting habitats, fencing, structures, and critical infrastructure.”
The nonprofit animal haven says its team “worked tirelessly to keep every animal safe during the storm,” however, “the aftermath has left us facing urgent repairs and significant financial strain.”
Photo: Popcorn Park Animal Refuge
The refuge says this winter has been “especially challenging.” It says “repeated severe weather has forced extended closures to the public, further limiting vital support and creating an added burden during an already difficult recovery period,” adding “we need our community now more than ever.”
Popcorn Park was established in 1977, according to its website. It’s part of the Associated Humane Societies — which bills itself as New Jersey’s largest animal welfare organization. Popcorn Park describes itself as “a sanctuary for abandoned, injured, ill, exploited, abused, or elderly farm animals, birds, and wildlife (domestic and exotic).”
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