Buildings with elevators near the M102 bus in Manhattan
This page shows buildings with elevators near the M102 bus line across Manhattan, with 801+ eligible buildings matching your filters (m102-bus + with-elevator). Openigloo helps you narrow down faster using building-level info plus signals like renter-written notes, review context, and open-data indicators. You can also use tenant Q&A-style guidance to confirm practical details before you commit, like elevator reliability, access rules, and what costs to expect beyond the asking rent.
Buildings with elevators near the M102 bus in Manhattan
Showing 235–252 of 801 buildings with elevators near the M102 bus in Manhattan.
429 East 52 Street
Turtle Bay
150 East 39 Street
Murray Hill
400 East 71 Street
Lenox Hill
525 East 72 Street
Lenox Hill
107 St Marks Place
East Village
420 East 54 Street
Sutton Place
222 E 34 St
Kips Bay
1510 Lexington Avenue
Carnegie Hill
194 East 2 Street
East Village
345 East 94 Street
Yorkville

245 E 44 St
Turtle Bay
1675 York Avenue
Yorkville
245 East 19 Street
Gramercy Park
307 East 44 Street
Turtle Bay
340 East 29 Street
Kips Bay
184 Lexington Avenue
Midtown East
154 East 29 Street
Kips Bay
530 East 89 Street
Yorkville
What to check before for buildings with elevators near the M102 bus in Manhattan
- Expect a transit-oriented search: buildings are filtered for proximity to the M102 bus and for having an elevator on-site.
- Before applying, confirm how the elevator is used (main access vs. freight/alternate entrances) and whether there are any resident restrictions.
- Ask about any additional monthly or one-time costs that may come with elevator buildings (e.g., doorman/package rules, building fees) even if the elevator itself is included.
- Check whether the listing notes elevator service as “operational” and whether there are any scheduled upgrades or known outages.
- If you’re moving with accessibility needs, ask for step-free routes from the entrance to your unit and whether the elevator fits your mobility device or moving needs.
- Use the notes and Q&A signals to compare building habits (response time, wait times for repairs) rather than relying only on photos.