
Park and Shore Apartments
ARCHITECTS
Woods Bagot
LEAD ARCHITECT
Gerald Gendreau
MANUFACTURERS
Benjamin Moore, Blanco, Duravit, Interface, Kohler, Stone Source, Tai Ping, Toto, Wolf Gordon, Archteype Frameless Glass, Elements Of Architecture, Bosch, Bosch 800 Series, Collection: Fifth Avenue, Elements Of Architecture, Flying Pig Grooming, P&l Marble, Soundply, Tiles
INTERIOR DESIGN
John Pampoukidis, Jessica Culver
ENVELOPE CONSULTANT, BOTH BUILDINGS
Sgh
ARCHITECT OF RECORD, 75 PARK
Marchetto Higgins Stieve
ARCHITECT OF RECORD, 2 SHORE
Poskanzer Skott Architects
MEP ENGINEER, 2 SHORE
Omdex Inc.
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEER, BOTH BUILDINGS
Langan Engineering & Environmental
STRUCTURAL ENGINEER, 75 PARK
O’donnell & Naccarato
STRUCTURAL ENGINEER, 2 SHORE
Structure Studio
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT, BOTH BUILDINGS
Semmens Associates
SECURITY/IT/AV, BOTH BUILDINGS
Shen Milsom & Willke Llc
MEP ENGINEER, 75 PARK
Icor Associates
CIVIL ENGINEER, BOTH BUILDINGS
Dresdner Robin
LOCATION
Jersey City, United States
CATEGORY
Mixed Use Architecture, Apartments, Retail
Text description provided by architect.
Located along the Hudson River waterfront, Park + Shore is a reimagined iteration of the brick-clad rental apartment buildings that were characteristic of the original Newport Development’s Master Plan.
The site is comprised of two distinct buildings—75 Park Lane and Shore House—which stand at 38 and six stories, respectively.
The taller of the two, containing 358 residences, is articulated into three distinct stacked, horizontal zones with a podium that maintains the narrow pedestrian street frontages with a low- rise base that extends to the street.
The tower portion is set back to respect the surrounding residential scale. Its façade is made up of a series of interlocking two-story frames with floor- to- ceiling glass.
The façade strategy for the shorter 71-unit Shore House is a horizontally staggered series of overlaid, single-height warm gray metal frames and recessed warm darker brick panels with floor to ceiling clear glass windows.
The staggered frames animate and modulate the façade creating a domestic scale that is less expected.
The two buildings are unified by common materials such as naturally colored metal and terracotta frames which connect them visually to the adjacent Newport Green Park and respects their context within traditional red masonry buildings.
The result is a collection of hospitality experiences in a reimagined historical context with the interiors of 75 Park evoking the sophisticated legacy of American modernism, while Shore House is a grittier, boutique building recalling the industrial brick past of this neighborhood.
