Buildings with low open violation rates near the M15-SBS bus in NYC
This page highlights NYC buildings with low open violation rates near the M15-SBS bus, based on Openigloo’s building data. You can start with 2,917+ buildings that match this filter pair, then narrow by what matters to you before you commit. Openigloo helps you vet buildings using building-level history signals, tenant-submitted experience (where available), and structured information you can cross-check. Use the building page details and ask questions in context of the open-data signals, not just the asking price or photos.
Buildings with low open violation rates near the M15-SBS bus in NYC
Showing 1,351–1,368 of 2,917 buildings with low open violation rates near the M15-SBS bus in NYC.
346 E 13 St
East Village
107 St Marks Place
East Village
195 Stanton Street
Lower East Side
518 East 83 Street
Yorkville
229 E 29 St
Kips Bay
49 Ludlow Street
Lower East Side
56 St Marks Place
East Village
198 Rivington Street
Lower East Side
230 East 27 Street
Kips Bay
1675 York Avenue
Yorkville
443 East 88 Street
Yorkville
265 East 66 Street
Lenox Hill
245 East 19 Street
Gramercy Park
329 East 63 Street
Lenox Hill
310 East 2 Street
East Village
307 East 44 Street
Turtle Bay
244 East 21 Street
Gramercy Park
331 East Houston Street
Lower East Side
What to check before for buildings with low open violation rates near the M15-SBS bus in NYC
- Confirm the exact address and building entrance distance to the M15-SBS stop you plan to use, since “near” can vary by block.
- If a building flags as low-open-violations, still read the latest notes on the building page and ask management about the current status and remediation timeline for any active issues.
- Look for what’s actually included with the apartment: utilities, maintenance responsiveness, and any building rules that affect your daily routine.
- Check lease terms and move-in costs (security deposit, broker fee, and any non-refundable fees) before you schedule a viewing.
- Use the Openigloo details and tenant Q&A to verify practical concerns like pests, heat/hot water reliability, and turnaround times for repairs.
- Treat “low open violations” as a screening signal, not a guarantee—conditions can change faster than open-record updates.