Good cause buildings near the B39 bus in Lower East Side
The Lower East Side in Manhattan is a dense, transit-connected neighborhood where many renters look for convenient bus access alongside tenant protections. This Openigloo scope also includes a building set filtered for “good cause” eligibility, with 468+ buildings available to compare. Openigloo’s neighborhood snapshot shows an average building rating of 3.4/5 across 179 rated buildings (building-level trends; individual units can differ)
Find good cause buildings near the B39 bus in Manhattan’s Lower East Side. This Openigloo page covers 468+ eligible buildings and groups them by the B39 commute area plus the “good cause” tenant-protection filter. Use Openigloo to compare buildings with renter-focused signals: building-level review ratings from rated buildings, open-data context, and tenant Q&A that helps you ask sharper questions before you sign a lease.
Good cause buildings near the B39 bus in Lower East Side
Showing 181–198 of 468 good cause buildings near the B39 bus in Lower East Side.
195 Stanton Street
Lower East Side
49 Ludlow Street
Lower East Side
198 Rivington Street
Lower East Side
75 Orchard Street
Lower East Side
71 Clinton Street
Lower East Side
157 Suffolk Street
Lower East Side
254 Broome Street
Lower East Side
61 Delancey St
Lower East Side
114 Ridge Street
Lower East Side
143 Ludlow Street
Lower East Side
8 Rivington Street
Lower East Side
120 Ridge Street
Lower East Side
203 Rivington Street
Lower East Side
87 Attorney Street
Lower East Side
168 Rivington Street
Lower East Side
170 Delancey Street
Lower East Side
132 Ludlow St
Lower East Side
163 Rivington Street
Lower East Side
What to check before for good cause buildings near the B39 bus in Lower East Side
- Confirm the commute details: verify the specific stops and walking time from the building to the B39 route you’ll use.
- Understand “good cause”: it’s a tenant-protection category tied to limits on certain rent increases and non-renewals—still confirm the building’s exact renewal and increase process.
- Use the rated-building rating as a starting point, then read recent comments and tenant Q&A about maintenance response, noise, and package handling.
- Don’t assume the unit matches the building: check lease terms, rent history if available, and any rules that affect your move-in timing and costs.
- Before paying anything, ask about the full move-in budget (deposit, any broker/billing requirements, and utilities) rather than focusing only on the asking rent.