Buildings with rent-stabilized apartments near the 3 train in Manhattan
Find buildings with rent-stabilized apartments near the 3 train in Manhattan. This filter covers regulatory protections tied to rent stabilization and focuses your search on buildings in the 3 train corridor, with 4,277+ eligible buildings right now. Openigloo brings building-level signals together so you can narrow faster: compare what’s currently available, read rated building notes, and use tenant Q&A to confirm how policies work in practice (especially around renewals, maintenance, and paperwork).
Buildings with rent-stabilized apartments near the 3 train in Manhattan
Showing 2,197–2,214 of 4,277 buildings with rent-stabilized apartments near the 3 train in Manhattan.

410 St Nicholas Avenue
Central Harlem

8 Spruce Street
Fulton/Seaport

71 Broadway
Financial District

375 S End Ave
Battery Park City

116 John Street
Financial District

37 Wall Street
Financial District

67 Wall Street
Financial District
360 West 34 Street
Hudson Yards

424 West 42 Street
Hell's Kitchen

350 West 37 Street
Hudson Yards

75 West End Avenue
All Upper West Side

99 John Street
Fulton/Seaport
20 Broad Street
Financial District

105 Duane Street
Tribeca

180 Riverside Boulevard
All Upper West Side
136 William Street
Fulton/Seaport

19 Dutch Street
Fulton/Seaport
155 West 68 Street
All Upper West Side
What to check before for buildings with rent-stabilized apartments near the 3 train in Manhattan
- Confirm the specific unit’s status: “rent-stabilized” applies to regulated units in the building, but availability can change day to day.
- Use the 3 train filter as a location starting point, then verify the walk/time you’ll actually use to commute and access the building.
- Before signing, ask how renewals are handled (timing, documentation, and any add-ons) and whether the building uses consistent notice practices.
- Check fees beyond rent: application costs, move-in deposits, and any required paperwork or administrative charges the building may apply.
- If you’re comparing multiple buildings, rely on building-level signals and tenant Q&A rather than assuming similar policies across buildings.