Buildings with low open violation rates near the Q train in Manhattan
Find buildings in Manhattan with low open violation rates, filtered to areas served by the Q train. This page shows 2,507+ buildings that match the multi-filter pair (low-open-violations + Q train). Openigloo helps you narrow faster by combining building-level signals with renter-first details like rated building feedback and structured question-and-answer context. It also uses NYC open-records signals for open-violation screening, so you can compare buildings side by side before you contact management or tour.
Buildings with low open violation rates near the Q train in Manhattan
Showing 1,207–1,224 of 2,507 buildings with low open violation rates near the Q train in Manhattan.
121 Madison Avenue
NoMad

826 8 Avenue
Midtown

300 West 55 Street
Hell's Kitchen
980 6Th Ave
Midtown South

205 East 95 Street
Yorkville

235 W 56 St
Midtown

225 East 63 Street
Lenox Hill
125 W 31 St
Midtown South
200 East 72 Street
Lenox Hill
1 Irving Place
Gramercy Park
215 East 95 Street
Yorkville
201 East 69 Street
Lenox Hill

175 E 96 St
Carnegie Hill
145 East 16 Street
Gramercy Park
432 East 88 Street
Yorkville
525 East 72 Street
Lenox Hill
488 7 Avenue
Midtown South
346 E 13 St
East Village
What to check before for buildings with low open violation rates near the Q train in Manhattan
- Confirm the exact address and how the building is connected to the Q train corridor (walk time, station access, and typical route).
- Check whether the building has any other maintenance or safety flags in the full Openigloo record, then ask management for the most recent documentation during your decision window.
- Ask what “low open-violation” means in practice for that building: which violation categories are included, whether items are contested, and the current status timeline.
- Verify lease terms and costs beyond rent (application fee, deposit, and any move-in fees), since enforcement history does not tell you about unit-specific pricing.
- Use the Openigloo Q&A and tenant notes as prompts for what to ask on a showing: how repairs get handled, response times, and what’s changed recently.