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This is the perfect time to visit your neighborhood Knowledge Beginnings Center

and discover what an environment designed for learning can mean to your child.

Each of our Knowledge Beginnings classrooms, from infant to preschool to school age, is designed to support learning. While the school day seems fun and playful to our children, the activities they are engaging in have been thoughtfully designed by Knowledge Beginnings educational experts to develop specific skills.

We would love to show you how our balanced approach and age-appropriate activities really make learning fun!

 

 

We look forward to seeing you!!

Note Article
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SFB June 19, 2013 at 02:02 pm
I totally disagree that the plan to build apartments on the hospital site is bad for Princeton. ForRead More the many people who drive into Princeton every day from neighboring townships to work, these apartments will offer an alternative that allows them to walk or cycle instead. Less traffic is good for everybody. Residents in these apartments will also support Princeton businesses and contribute to Princeton's tax base. They will make the town more vibrant. The plan has been substantially revised to better fit in with the neighborhood. In fact it makes the neighborhood more open by adding several new through streets and a park on the corner of Witherspoon and Franklin. 56 affordable units are provided in both big buildings on every level and facing every direction. This is a fantastic opportunity for tenants of income-restricted properties in Princeton. These apartments would be beneficial anywhere in Princeton. They will increase the value of surrounding homes and provide new housing opportunities. Neighbors are entitled to voice their protest, but they will reap the greatest benefit from living next to a modern, well-maintained residential property instead of the much larger, uglier hospital building, which generated far more traffic and regular shipments of biohazardous waste.
David Keddie June 19, 2013 at 03:34 pm
Respectfully, there are over 24,000 workers who drive into Princeton each day many of whom wouldRead More love to live within walking distance of their jobs. In the former Borough more people walk to work than drive. Surely we would all benefit from more housing in town. Princeton has become unaffordable. No doubt if zoning had existed when the Witherspoon/Jackson neighborhood developed it would have been blocked by the neighbors. The only way to preserve the original character of our town as one marked by socioeconomic diversity and affordability is to increase the supply of housing. Other college towns like Ithaca, Berkeley, and Cambridge are built at much higher densities and don't suffer as a result.