Buildings with heat and hot water included near transit in Financial District
Financial District, Manhattan is a walkable, transit-heavy area where many renters focus on getting the basics handled in the lease. On this Openigloo scope, buildings with heat and hot water included and near-transit access are actively searched, with 26+ eligible buildings matching this filter set. For building quality signals, Financial District has an average building rating of 4.2/5 across 48 rated buildings (building-level trends; individual units can differ)
This page covers buildings in Manhattan’s Financial District with heat + hot water included, plus near-transit convenience. There are 26+ eligible buildings matching these filters right now on Openigloo. Use Openigloo to narrow faster: view building details and eligibility signals, then confirm the specifics with the landlord. Ratings from rated buildings and tenant Q&A can help you understand how these services work in practice, before you schedule a showing or sign.
Buildings with heat and hot water included near transit in Financial District
Showing 1–18 of 26 buildings with heat and hot water included near transit in Financial District.

2 Gold Street
Financial District

63 Wall Street
Financial District

20 Exchange Place
Financial District

1 West Street
Financial District

180 Water Street
Financial District

100 Maiden Lane
Financial District

45 Wall Street
Financial District

90 Washington Street
Financial District
100 John Street
Financial District
110 Washington Street
Financial District

116 John Street
Financial District

37 Wall Street
Financial District

67 Wall Street
Financial District
70 Pine Street
Financial District
20 Broad Street
Financial District
9 Maiden Lane
Financial District
90 West Street
Financial District
21 West Street
Financial District
What to check before for buildings with heat and hot water included near transit in Financial District
- Confirm what’s actually included: heat and hot water should be explicitly stated in the lease or building paperwork, including any limits on hours or usage.
- Check for “near-transit” convenience in your commute direction by comparing the closest station exits and walking time at different hours.
- Verify unit-level utilities and billing: even with heat/hot water included, you may still pay for electricity, cooking fuel, or other charges.
- Use the rated-building signals (and tenant Q&A) to sanity-check the day-to-day reality of maintenance and service reliability.
- Ask about transfer of responsibility: if a building switches systems or changes policies, get the timeline and what that means for current tenants’ costs.