High-rise buildings near the 3 train in NYC
Find high-rise buildings near the 3 train in NYC. This page covers 828+ buildings that match the 3-train location filter plus the high-rise filter (828+ floors). Openigloo helps you narrow faster by pairing building-level details with renter-focused signals like ratings and review notes, plus direct tenant questions and answers. You can compare options across buildings, then confirm specifics with the building or management before you sign.
High-rise buildings near the 3 train in NYC
Showing 361–378 of 828 high-rise buildings near the 3 train in NYC.

250 Ashland Place
Fort Greene

116 John Street
Financial District

777 Avenue Of The Americas
Chelsea

111 Lawrence Street
Downtown Brooklyn

37 Wall Street
Financial District

67 Wall Street
Financial District
360 West 34 Street
Hudson Yards
70 Pine Street
Financial District

424 West 42 Street
Hell's Kitchen
260 Gold Street
Downtown Brooklyn

350 West 37 Street
Hudson Yards

99 John Street
Fulton/Seaport
20 Broad Street
Financial District

105 Duane Street
Tribeca
11 Maiden Lane
Financial District

180 Riverside Boulevard
All Upper West Side

180 Montague Street
Brooklyn Heights
309 Gold Street
Downtown Brooklyn
What to check before for high-rise buildings near the 3 train in NYC
- Expect 828+ floor buildings with more unit density, so building amenities, elevators, and move-in logistics can be a bigger part of the decision.
- Use the map and commute notes to check which stations are actually convenient for your work and schedule, not just the general “near the 3 train” label.
- Before applying, confirm the lease terms, what’s included in rent (utilities, internet, parking), and any building rules that affect day-to-day living.
- If the building has doorman/package handling or shared outdoor space, confirm access hours, guest policy, and any reservation process.
- Ask about fees that can change your monthly total (application/admin fees, security deposit structure, key fob costs, and any one-time move-in charges).
- If you’re relying on building-condition signals from open records or past reports, ask the super or leasing office what’s been updated most recently.