Good cause buildings near Fortune 1000 companies in Manhattan
This page helps you find Good cause buildings near Fortune 1000 companies in Manhattan, with 3,955+ buildings to explore. Use the good-cause filter to focus on a tenant-protection category tied to renewal and certain rent-increase/non-renewal rules. Openigloo aggregates building-level data and renter feedback so you can compare buildings faster, then confirm details with the management team. Look at what renters say, the open-data signals shown on each building page, and any tenant Q&A or notes that clarify how the rules play out day to day for current tenants.
Good cause buildings near Fortune 1000 companies in Manhattan
Showing 1,549–1,566 of 3,955 good cause buildings near Fortune 1000 companies in Manhattan.
230 East 44 Street
Turtle Bay
300 East 39 Street
Murray Hill
121 Madison Avenue
NoMad

105 Duane Street
Tribeca
77 St Marks Place
East Village
11 Maiden Lane
Financial District

826 8 Avenue
Midtown

776 6 Ave
NoMad

180 Riverside Boulevard
All Upper West Side
560 West 43 Street
Hell's Kitchen
136 William Street
Fulton/Seaport

300 West 55 Street
Hell's Kitchen

480 2 Avenue
Kips Bay
247 East 28 Street
Kips Bay
90 West Street
Financial District
120 East 34 Street
Midtown East
980 6Th Ave
Midtown South
601 West 57 Street
Hell's Kitchen
What to check before for good cause buildings near Fortune 1000 companies in Manhattan
- Start with the location intent: the “near Fortune 1000 companies” scope narrows Manhattan coverage toward high-employment areas while you still compare a large set of buildings (3,955+).
- For any good-cause building, confirm the practical details: lease renewal process, documentation needed, and how notices are handled for your specific lease term.
- Check availability and timing on the building page before you tour, since “near” doesn’t guarantee an apartment matching your move-in date.
- Review fees and move-in costs in the listing and ask for a written summary (broker fee, security deposit, any one-time move-in charges).
- Use renter feedback and tenant Q&A to spot patterns, but treat them as context and verify current policies directly with management.