Bergen County, New Jersey
```mediawiki Bergen County is a county located in the northeastern portion of New Jersey, situated directly across the Hudson River from New York City. It is the most populous county in New Jersey, with a population of 955,732 recorded in the 2020 U.S. Census, and it functions as a major suburban and commercial hub in the New York metropolitan area.[1] The county spans approximately 233 square miles and comprises 70 municipalities, ranging from dense urban centers like Hackensack and Fort Lee to quieter residential communities in its northern and western reaches. Bergen County's proximity to Manhattan, combined with its extensive transportation infrastructure including the George Washington Bridge, the Lincoln Tunnel approach corridors, and New Jersey Transit bus and rail lines, has made it one of the most economically significant regions in the northeastern United States. The county is known for its exceptionally diverse population, strong public schools, a major retail corridor in Paramus, and one of the largest Korean-American communities in the country.
History
Bergen County was one of the original counties established in New Jersey, created in 1683 during the period of English colonial rule.[2] Before European arrival, the area was home to the Lenape people, who maintained permanent settlements, agricultural clearings, and trade routes throughout the region for centuries. The Lenape called the Hudson River the Muhheakantuck, meaning "the river that flows both ways," and used the waterways of what is now Bergen County for fishing, travel, and trade between inland and coastal communities.[3]
The name "Bergen" derives from Bergen op Zoom, a city in the Dutch province of Noord-Brabant, reflecting the county's Dutch colonial heritage. Early European settlement was dominated by Dutch traders and farmers who established agricultural communities and trading posts along the Hudson River and its tributaries beginning in the early 17th century. The county played a significant role during the American Revolutionary War, with numerous engagements and military movements occurring throughout the region as British and American forces competed for control of the strategic Hudson River crossings. Fort Lee, named for General Charles Lee, served as a critical Continental Army position before its fall to British forces in November 1776 during the Retreat across New Jersey.
During the 19th century, Bergen County experienced gradual but measurable development, with the construction of turnpikes and eventually railroads driving commerce and population growth. The Erie Railroad's expansion into the county connected Bergen County communities to New York markets and enabled the growth of small manufacturing. The latter half of the 20th century brought rapid suburban expansion as families relocated from New York City, drawn by affordable housing, larger lots, and access to good public schools while remaining within commuting distance of Manhattan. This migration accelerated after World War II and continued steadily through the 1990s. Bergen County's population grew from roughly 500,000 in 1950 to over 800,000 by 1980, establishing it as the dominant population center in New Jersey well before the 2000 census.[4] Growth slowed in the early 21st century as the county built out most of its developable land, shifting focus from new construction toward redevelopment of older commercial and industrial sites.
George Washington Bridge
The George Washington Bridge, completed and opened to traffic on October 25, 1931, was the transformative infrastructure event in Bergen County's modern history.[5] Before the bridge, crossing the Hudson required ferry service, which limited development. Direct vehicular connection to upper Manhattan made Bergen County an accessible destination for commuters and businesses alike. The bridge's lower deck was added in 1962, doubling capacity. Today the GWB carries over 100 million vehicles per year, making it one of the busiest motor vehicle bridges in the world, and its Fort Lee anchorage point anchors the county's eastern transportation network.
Geography
Bergen County occupies the northeastern corner of New Jersey, bounded by the Hudson River to the east, the New York state line to the north, Passaic County to the west, and Hudson and Passaic counties to the south. The county's terrain changes noticeably from east to west. Along the Hudson, the land sits near sea level and the shoreline is largely developed, with the Palisades — a dramatic basalt cliff formation — rising sharply above the river in municipalities like Fort Lee, Englewood Cliffs, and Alpine. Moving westward, the terrain flattens into the broad Hackensack River valley before rising again toward the Ramapo Mountains in the county's northwestern corner, where elevations reach approximately 520 feet.[6]
The Hackensack River is the county's principal waterway, flowing southward through the central portion of the county from the New York state line before emptying into Newark Bay. Historically the river supported mills, tanneries, and small-boat commerce; today it serves primarily as a drainage corridor and recreational amenity, with ongoing water quality restoration efforts managed through the Hackensack Riverkeeper organization. The Pascack Brook drains the western municipalities before joining the Hackensack system.
The Meadowlands, a large area of tidal wetlands and former industrial land in the county's southeastern section, was heavily polluted and partially drained during the 20th century. The New Jersey Meadowlands Commission has overseen environmental remediation efforts for decades. The area includes MetLife Stadium in neighboring Essex County and the American Dream mall complex in East Rutherford, just across the Bergen County border. Within Bergen County, the Meadowlands boundary encompasses wetland restoration zones and a handful of industrial properties.
Bergen County experiences a humid continental climate — the humid subtropical classification sometimes applied to the region understates the genuine cold winters typical of the area. Average January temperatures hover in the low 30s Fahrenheit, while July averages reach the mid-80s. Annual precipitation averages approximately 47 inches, distributed fairly evenly across the year, with nor'easters capable of bringing significant snowfall between December and March. Flooding is a recurring issue in low-lying municipalities, particularly along the Hackensack River and its tributaries, where heavy rainfall events can inundate streets and basements in communities including Moonachie, Little Ferry, and South Hackensack. Hurricane Sandy in October 2012 caused severe flooding and infrastructure damage throughout the county's eastern municipalities, a benchmark disaster that shapes local emergency planning to this day.
Municipalities
Bergen County's 70 municipalities vary widely in size, density, and character. Hackensack, the county seat, sits in the geographic center of the county and is home to the county courthouse, administrative offices, and Bergen Community College. Fort Lee, perched at the western end of the George Washington Bridge, is among the densest municipalities in New Jersey and hosts a large Korean and East Asian immigrant population. Paramus, located in the central county along Routes 4 and 17, contains one of the highest concentrations of retail space per capita in the United States and enforces blue laws prohibiting most retail sales on Sundays — a legal holdover that nonetheless keeps traffic manageable one day per week. Englewood is a mid-sized city with a historically significant African-American community, active arts institutions, and a commercial downtown. Ridgewood, in the western portion of the county, is a wealthy residential community consistently ranked among New Jersey's top school districts. Teaneck, one of the first municipalities in the United States to voluntarily desegregate its public schools in 1964, has a large Orthodox Jewish population alongside Black, South Asian, and Korean communities. Alpine, along the Palisades in the northeast, is consistently ranked among the wealthiest ZIP codes in the United States.
Demographics
Bergen County is one of the most ethnically and culturally diverse counties in the United States. The 2020 Census counted 955,732 residents, of whom approximately 64% identified as white, 16% as Asian, 14% as Hispanic or Latino, and 6% as Black or African American, with the remaining identifying as multiracial or other categories.[7]
The Korean-American community is the most prominent immigrant group in the county by visibility and concentration. Palisades Park has the highest percentage of Korean-Americans of any municipality in the United States, and Fort Lee's Korean commercial district along Lemoine Avenue is one of the most recognized outside of Los Angeles' Koreatown. Korean-language signage, restaurants, grocery stores, and businesses are prominent features of the commercial corridors in both towns as well as in parts of Hackensack, Leonia, and Ridgefield. The county also hosts the largest concentration of Japanese-Americans on the East Coast, a community with roots in the post-World War II era that has grown through subsequent waves of corporate transferees and immigrants, particularly in Fort Lee and Edgewater.[8]
The South Asian community — primarily Indian-American families from Gujarat, Punjab, and other regions — is concentrated in communities including Woodbridge, Palisades Park, and Cliffside Park. The Hispanic population is distributed broadly across the county, with significant Colombian, Dominican, Ecuadorian, and Mexican communities present in Hackensack, Garfield, Lodi, and Bergenfield. The Italian-American community, with roots going back to early 20th-century immigration, remains prominent in communities like Hasbrouck Heights, Wood-Ridge, and Lyndhurst. Bergen County's Jewish population is substantial, with particularly large Orthodox communities in Teaneck, Bergenfield, and New Milford and a long-established Reform and Conservative presence across many municipalities.
Culture
Bergen County's cultural life reflects the breadth of its population. The county hosts dozens of ethnic festivals, community parades, and public celebrations throughout the year, ranging from the Korean Lunar New Year celebrations in Palisades Park to the Italian-heritage Columbus Day parades held in multiple municipalities. The county's restaurant culture is genuinely international in scope — it's possible to eat authentic Korean barbecue, Peruvian ceviche, Ethiopian injera, and Neapolitan pizza within a few miles of one another in the central county.
The Bergen Performing Arts Center (bergenPAC) in Englewood is the county's premier mid-sized concert and performing arts venue, presenting touring Broadway shows, concerts, comedy performances, and children's programming throughout the year.[9] The Hackensack Meridian Health Theatre at the Count Basie Center for the Arts in nearby Red Bank draws county residents to regional performing arts. The Steuben House in River Edge, maintained by the Bergen County Historical Society, is one of New Jersey's most significant colonial-era structures and served as a headquarters for George Washington during the Revolutionary War.[10]
The Bergen County Park system operates 21 parks covering more than 7,700 acres of land throughout the county.[11] Van Saun County Park in Paramus is among the most visited, featuring a zoo, botanical garden, historic carousel, and extensive walking and picnic areas. Saddle River County Park provides a continuous recreational greenway running north–south through multiple municipalities. The Palisades Interstate Park, which runs along the Hudson River shoreline above Fort Lee and is jointly administered by New Jersey and New York, offers some of the most dramatic natural scenery in the metropolitan region, with hiking trails along the cliff edge and views across the Hudson to Manhattan.
The Hackensack River waterfront has seen active revitalization in recent years, with new parks and walking paths developed in Hackensack, Teaneck, and along the waterfront communities of Edgewater and Fort Lee. Edgewater's waterfront, once a line of deteriorating industrial piers, has been redeveloped into a mixed-use residential and retail district with direct views of the Manhattan skyline.
Economy
Bergen County's economy is one of the most productive county-level economies in the northeastern United States, built on retail, healthcare, corporate operations, real estate, and professional services. The county's total assessed property value exceeds $100 billion, and median household income consistently ranks among the top tier of New Jersey's 21 counties.[12]
The Paramus retail corridor, centered on Routes 4 and 17, is routinely cited as one of the highest-grossing retail districts in the United States, generating estimated annual sales exceeding $5 billion.[13] Major shopping destinations include the Bergen Town Center, Paramus Park, Garden State Plaza, and Westfield Fashion Square. The concentration of retail generates significant sales tax revenue and employment but also creates chronic traffic congestion along the Routes 4 and 17 corridors on weekdays.
Healthcare is a major economic anchor. Hackensack Meridian Health, one of New Jersey's largest health systems, operates its flagship Hackensack University Medical Center in the county seat, a Level I trauma center with more than 700 beds and thousands of employees.[14] Valley Hospital, headquartered in Paramus after relocating from Ridgewood, is another major employer and provider. Together, healthcare and social assistance employ tens of thousands of Bergen County residents.
The county hosts regional or North American headquarters operations for companies in pharmaceuticals, financial services, media, and technology. Several Japanese corporations maintain their U.S. headquarters in Bergen County, particularly in Fort Lee and Edgewater, a pattern that reinforces the county's Japanese-American community. The real estate market is consistently competitive, with median home prices well above both state and national averages, driven by demand from commuters and buyers seeking access to top-ranked school districts.
Small businesses — family-owned restaurants, professional practices, retail shops, and personal services — remain a critical part of the economy throughout the county's smaller municipalities. The county's main transportation corridors provide access advantages for both retail operations and logistics, with the George Washington Bridge and the Route 3/Route 17 network connecting businesses to regional distribution networks.
Transportation
Transportation infrastructure defines much of Bergen County's geography and development pattern. The George Washington Bridge connects Fort Lee to upper Manhattan and carries more motor vehicle traffic annually than any other bridge in the world.[15] The approach roads — Interstate 95, U.S. Route 1/9, and the Palisades Interstate Park