The new set of real estate was designed by
François Spoerry, a French architect, who invented the concept of "soft architecture", that would prefigure
new urbanism. He developed the concept at
Port Grimaud, a waterfront project in
Saint-Tropez,
France, and attempted to adapt it at Port Liberté. Commenced in the 1980s, this European-style mixed-use complex planned for 2,280 residential units, a 245-boat slip marina, 590 canal boat slips, 350-room hotel, a office building, retail/commercial spaces recreation facilities, a health club and a yacht club. However, the complexity of the design, the costly canal engineering and the collapse of Wall Street in the late 1980s drove the project to bankruptcy. Only 37 town homes and 363 of the planned residential units are completed.
Joseph Barry of the Applied Company based at
Hoboken, New Jersey took it over, abandoned the canal plan and completed Phase 1 and Phase 2 of construction in early 2000s. In 2018, permits were applied for a permit to build 284 units by
Toll Brothers. In 2019, the city approved the construction of a five-story building with 400 units, as well as another plan to build four-story townhouses with 69 units, both under Toll Brothers. However, by 2021, the deal had fallen through, a new application was submitted by Ironstate Development for the construction of a five-story building with 401 units and a seven-story 602-space
parking garage, being almost identical to the previously approved Toll Brothers building. In 2022, the city approved Ironstate Development's plan for the apartment building. In 2023, construction of the new building began. In 2025, to fill the remaining ten acres of land in Port Liberté, Putle Homes proposed a 168-unit townhouse complex consisting of 19 four-story buildings in called Liberty Watch. The complex would have 336 parking spaces for residents and 80 additional street spots, as well as 168 bicycle parking spaces. The plan has significantly less units than the allowed 512 units, which was reportedly due to being more aesthetically pleasing and to adhere to
NJDEP flood hazard requirements and
stormwater rules. ==References==