Piers along the Hudson shore of Manhattan were formerly used for shipping and berthing ocean-going ships. In shipping notices, they were designated as, for example, "Pier 14, North River". As with the river, the name "North River piers" has largely been supplanted by "Hudson River piers", or just by a pier and number, e.g., "Pier 54". Pier 40 is located at Houston Street, and the numbering of the piers to the north correspond to the nearest numbered street plus 40 – thus, for example, North River Pier 86 is at West 46th Street. Most of the piers that once existed in lower Manhattan fell into disuse or were destroyed in the later half of the 20th century. The remaining piers are
Pier A at
the Battery and piers ranging from Pier 25 at
North Moore Street to Pier 99 at
59th Street. Many of these piers and the waterfront between them are part of the
Hudson River Park which stretches from
59th Street to
the Battery. The park, a joint project between
New York City and
New York State commenced in 1998, consists of several non-contiguous parcels of land and piers totaling , plus another of the river itself. Several piers were rebuilt for adaptive re-use as part of the park project, with approximately 70% of the planned work complete by 2011.
Status with the
RMS Lusitania docked, in July 2011 behind
NY Waterway's
West Midtown Ferry Terminal at Pier 79;
Weehawken Terminal was located across the river at the base of the
Hudson Palisades from its opening in 1884 and its closing in 1959. •
Pier A is a designated national and New York City landmark. The building on the pier dates to 1886, and was used by the city's Department of Docks, Harbor Police, and was later a
fireboat station. The pier was closed and renovated from 1992 to November 2014, after which it reopened as a restaurant. • What little remained of Piers 1 through 21 were buried under
landfill from the
World Trade Center construction project in 1973 and turned into
Battery Park City. • Pier 25 is a sports and docking facility at the foot of
North Moore Street with a mini golf course. • Pier 26 was rebuilt over 2008–2009 and is home to a new park designed by
OLIN and
Rafael Viñoly and opened in September 2020, featuring a sports court and an engineered wetland. • Pier 34, at Canal Street, contains a ventilation shaft for the
Holland Tunnel. •
Pier 40, at Houston Street, was built as a terminal for the
Holland America Line in 1962, and now contains various
playing fields, long-term parking spaces and the Trapeze School of New York on the roof (during the summer). • The term "
Christopher Street Pier" usually refers specifically to Pier 45 opposite West 10th Street in
Greenwich Village. However, it refers to three other piers as well, between Piers 42–51. Pier 51 houses a water-themed playground, part of Hudson River Park. •
Piers 52 and 53, also known as Gansevoort Peninsula, were formerly a
New York City Department of Sanitation facility used for shipping trash out of Manhattan. They are being converted into a public park, expected to be complete in 2023. Also at the end of Pier 53 is the
FDNY's Marine 1
fireboat facility, occupying a new building completed in 2011. •
Pier 54 and Pier 55, part of Hudson River Park since its creation in 1998, was closed in 2011 when it was deemed structurally unsound. Plans were unveiled in November 2014 for a new park designed by
Heatherwick Studio and costing $130 million. The project was temporarily canceled in 2017 after costs had grown to $250 million, but was later revived as part of an agreement to complete the remainder of Hudson River Park. The new park, dubbed "
Little Island," took the place of the now-dismantled Piers 54 and 55, and opened in May 2021. •
Pier 57, at 15th Street and 11th Avenue, formerly served as a terminal for shipping and storage of cargo for the
Grace Line. Between 1969 and 2003, Pier 57 housed the
Hudson Pier Bus Depot for the
New York City Transit Authority. After its abandonment, plans created in 2009 called for an improved pier design for commercial use, initially dubbed the SuperPier by its developer. The renovated pier reopened to the public in April 2022, featuring office space for
Google, a food hall, and a rooftop park. • Piers 59–62 are used as
Chelsea Piers, which were originally a passenger ship terminal in the early 1900s that was used by the
RMS Lusitania and was the destination of the
RMS Titanic. The Chelsea Piers Sports & Entertainment Complex opened at the site in 1995. •
Pier 63 was the location of a
Pavonia Ferry terminal that opened in 1869. The terminal was demolished in 1942, and the pier then housed a
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad transfer barge. In the late 1980s, boat enthusiast John Krevey converted an old
railroad barge on the Hudson River to a floating jetty. •
Pier 66 is part of Hudson River Park, It is located at
26th Street and is used for sailing and paddle sports. • Pier 76, formerly the NYPD impound lot, was reopened by the Hudson River Park Trust on June 9, 2021 as a park and cultural space. • Pier 78 is the only Hudson River pier that is privately owned, and is used for sightseeing cruises. • Pier 79 is the
West Midtown Ferry Terminal used by
NY Waterway and
NYC Ferry. Pier 79 connects to an
Art Deco style ventilation shaft for the
Lincoln Tunnel. • Pier 81 is site of North River Lobster and World Yacht • Pier 83 is used by
Circle Line Sightseeing Cruises. • Pier 84 served as a concert venue from the former
Schaefer Music Festival. The pier also houses a water-themed playground within Hudson River Park, is a stop for
New York Water Taxi, and has a bicycle rental shop and other businesses serving primarily tourists. the centerpiece of which is the
USS Intrepid, an aircraft carrier that served from World War II to the Vietnam War. This pier once served as the passenger ship terminal for the
United States Lines. • Piers 88–92 are part of the
Manhattan Cruise Terminal, used by numerous modern
cruise ships and
ocean liners. Pier 92 was subsequently used as an exhibition space, but closed in 2019 after the pier was found to be unsafe. • Pier 94 was formerly also part of the Passenger Ship Terminal, and until 2020 housed the "UnConvention Center", the second-largest
exhibition hall in New York City. It was redeveloped into a film studio that opened in 2026. • Pier 96 is part of Hudson River Park. It is the home of Manhattan Community Boathouse, an all-volunteer non-profit organization that offers free kayaking to the public each summer. • Pier 97 is part of Hudson River Park. It was until 1975 the home of the
Swedish American Line passenger ship terminal. The terminal was demolished some time after 1984 and the pier has since been used for various purposes, including many years as a Sanitation Department parking lot and a brief period as a live event venue sponsored by
JBL and
Live Nation. In November 2019, it was announced that the pier would be converted into a park, with construction expected to start in September 2020. As of September 2020, the pier is now expected to reopen in March 2024. • Pier 98 is used for Con Edison employee car parking, a training facility and delivery by barge and storage of fuel oil. • Pier 99 houses the West 59th Street Marine Transfer Station, used by the
New York City Sanitation Department. • Pier I and most of Riverside Park South were originally part of the abandoned Penn Central railyard between 59th and 72nd Streets. These lettered piers were built at a 55-degree angle to the shore to facilitate the transfer of rail cars from their tracks to a waiting barge. Pier I is the only remaining rail pier. The
69th Street Transfer Bridge of the
New York Central Railroad is still extant and has been listed on the
National Register of Historic Places since 2003. ==Railroads and ferries==