Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    9/11 Memorial Clock Photos

    Recommended Reviews - 9/11 Memorial Clock

    Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
    Yelp app icon
    Browse more easily on the app
    Review Feed Illustration

    10 years ago

    Helpful 6
    Thanks 0
    Love this 4
    Oh no 0

    Verify this business for free

    People searched for Landmarks & Historical Buildings 111 times last month within 5 miles of this business.

    Verify this business

    Eight On the Break - Counter - Cheap food options

    Eight On the Break

    (32 reviews)

    $

    8 on the Break is legendary…read more In particular, today it's a hub for music game fans, featuring arcade games scarcely available elsewhere on the continent. The selection is fantastic and rounds are cheap. There are also some well-loved racing games. The machines are well cared for, and you get to use your quarters instead of a plastic card. (It's just more fun that way.) Most cabs allow you to save your progress in one way or another. Of course, there are a good number of pinball tables. No matter what you're there for, do check out at least one of them. There's still nothing quite like a great game of pinball. No writeup of 8otB is complete without mention of the Break Steak. $5 for a cheesesteak, fries, and soda. You get a lot more than what you pay for. Seriously, where I live I have trouble finding an equivalent quality & amount of food for twice the price. If you're in the area, and you have even a passing interest in arcades, you owe it to yourself to check the Break out. Your dollar stretches pretty far. If you're interested in these types of games, well... I know of people who drive hours to get to this place. Bring cash. If the owner sees this... thanks for all the great moments, there really is no other place like the Break.

    This is a hole in the wall arcade that has a number of rhythm games you wouldn't normally find as…read morewell as fighter games like tekken etc. There was an automatic hand sanitizer machine upon entering but it was empty, luckily I brought my own. Each machine they ask you spray/wipe down in between uses however they don't give you a disposable paper towel, it is the same rag used over and over again which didn't seem very sanitary to me. The DDR machine count slot was jammed so it was unplayable. Then the in the grooved machine, the left control pad matched the track on the right side and vice versa which was kind of inconvenient since me and my boyfriend play at different speeds/levels. The whole place just seemed kind of run down and not well taken care of. However, if you're specifically looking for rhythm games then this is the place for you.

    Rt 78 East Bound - My view going home

    Rt 78 East Bound

    (1 review)

    When my family moved to the Somerset County area of NJ in the mid 70s, Rt 78 East extended only as…read morefar as the Watchung/Berkeley Heights/Gillette exit. You weren't going to get to NY via Rt. 78. My family went to NY a lot (always had), and in order to do it, my father had to drive up Rt. 287 North (which in those days only extended as far as Montville), turn off onto Rt. 80 East, and then continue on that, or get off at the Rt. 46 exit (Rt. 46 became Rt. 3). Growing up in Wayne, a drive into NYC took 20 minutes. In Somerset County, it took approximately an hour (more, if one hit traffic). When I started to drive, and didn't feel like taking the Lackawanna train in with friends, I followed the same route as my father. I believe it was in the mid to late 80s that construction was performed that enabled Rt. 78 East to take you directly into NYC. Instead of ending at the Watching/Berkeley Heights/Gillette exit, the highway now took you through the outskirts of Springfield, Union, Maplewood, Newark, Hoboken (or Weehawken, if you continued up to the Lincoln Tunnel instead of the Holland), in a direct line to NYC. I remember the 1st trip I made in via that route with 2 friends (I wasn't driving). It seemed very quick, certainly in comparison with the long, arduous journey I was used to taking. We were in the city in approximately 40 minutes. I remember being thrilled that driving into NYC wasn't going to be such a major operation anymore. Quick, efficient, relatively painless...and if we wanted to drink (or...uhh...partake of "other incidentals"...to coin a phrase), there was still the Lackawanna train (as teenagers, we used to take the train to concerts, and would bring a ton of booze...and "other incidentals"... on the train with us, and we never got hassled. Not ever. I guess it was a different time). Fast forward several decades... The Lackawanna doesn't exist anymore, I haven't been to NYC in years (its degeneration into Disneyland I find too depressing and uninteresting, considering what it once was), or gone to a concert (the last one was the Ramones at the Ritz), or taken a drink (in my old age, I can't handle the hangovers), or engaged in "other incidentals" (long story short-- I snorted what I thought was cocaine in NYC, realized it was actually heroin in the Holland Tunnel, threw up on myself in Hoboken, and was driven in a stupor on Rt. 78 West by friends who dropped me off at home--- it's an ugly memory, and let's just say that that was my epiphany, or "wake up call"), Now, I drive Rt. 78 East every day (and Rt. 78 West every night) as an average working schlub, like a million other average working schlubs. Day in, day out. Obviously, it's become a much more pedestrian, routine (and safer) endeavor. Beyond that, what else is there to say, or rate? It moves from dull, leafy suburbia, to urban Newark, to the swamps surrounding the NJ Turnpike. The hills and valleys become flat and industrial. The roadway can be a problem in inclement weather, especially when you're still in suburbia and the road dips precipitously from a hilltop down into a valley. When the road is icy, you might as well be on a ski slope. I definitely have a problem driving in snow (the result of a near fatal accident in snow way back when), and even heavy rain can make for a nerve-wracking driving experience. One particular problem I have is that a lot...and I mean a lot...of long-term construction is being done on Rt. 78 (east and west), as well as on the NJ Turnpike. Three lanes narrow down to one, and a 40 minute commute can become an hour and a half, or more. I understand that what needs to be done needs to be done, but this aspect of the commute can be infuriating, and mega-stressful. Other than, it's a fast, efficient method of moving from north/central NJ to NYC. Probably could have said that in one or 2 sentences, but I'm nothing if not verbose.

    9/11 Memorial Clock - landmarks - Updated May 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...