Google Maps and Roc Nation Chart the New York Locations That Helped Build JAY-Z's Career
From Marcy Houses to Madison Square Garden, the JAŸ-Z 30 Google Maps list traces 30 years of ‘Reasonable Doubt’ and the city behind it.
Summary
Roc Nation has partnered with Google Maps to launch a curated location list marking the 30th anniversary of JAY-Z's debut album Reasonable Doubt, pinning key NYC sites tied to his career
The list spans recording studios including Jungle City, Manhattan Center Studios, D&D Studios, and The Hit Factory, alongside concert venues such as Madison Square Garden, Yankee Stadium, Webster Hall, and Radio City Music Hall
Personal and cultural landmarks including Building 1 at Marcy Houses, The Tunnel nightclub, Pier 61, and the 40/40 Club round out a map that moves from JAY-Z's origins to his evolution as a mogul
Roc Nation has partnered with Google Maps to release a curated location list as part of the JAY-Z 30 anniversary celebrations, pinning the New York City sites that shaped Reasonable Doubt and the three decades of career that followed it. The list covers recording studios, concert venues, nightlife landmarks, and personal touchstones across Manhattan and Brooklyn, turning the navigation platform into a geographic record of one of hip-hop’s most documented careers.
On the studio side, the list anchors itself in the rooms where JAY-Z built his recording legacy. Jungle City, Manhattan Center Studios, D&D Studios, and The Hit Factory are all included, a selection that spans the independent hustle of the Reasonable Doubt era through to the major-label infrastructure that followed. The Hit Factory in particular carries significant weight in New York recording history, having hosted sessions for some of the defining albums of the 1990s.
The concert venues on the list trace a parallel arc of scale. Madison Square Garden and Yankee Stadium represent the largest stages Hov has occupied in New York, the latter serving as the site of his JAY-Z 30 anniversary concerts this July. Webster Hall and Radio City Music Hall fill out the range, marking earlier and more intimate moments in a live career that grew from club dates to stadium headlining.
The nightlife entries offer a different kind of cultural specificity. The Tunnel, the NYC hip-hop institution launched by Pete Gatien whose Sunday night Mecca parties became a fixture of 1990s rap culture, is listed alongside Pier 61, a nearby location synonymous with that same era of nightlife. Together they place Jay squarely inside the New York scene that Reasonable Doubt both documented and helped define.
The list’s most personal entries are also its most grounding. Building 1 at the Marcy Houses in Brooklyn, where JAY-Z grew up, sits on the map as the starting point of the entire arc. The 40/40 Club, the sports bar and lounge he launched in 2003, marks the other end of it — the moment the recording artist became a hospitality entrepreneur. Between those two coordinates, the full Google Maps list reads less like a tourist guide and more like a biography told through addresses.
Check out the full Google Maps list.




















