Buildings with low open violation rates near the N train in NYC
This page helps you find buildings near the N train in NYC with low open violation rates. There are 4,661+ eligible buildings in Openigloo’s building explorer using the low-open-violations filter plus the N-train corridor scope. Openigloo combines building-level signals with renter-first context. Use filters to narrow down options, then read what tenants and residents noted in reviews and Q&A. We also pull open-data signals about violations so you can ask the right questions before you apply or sign a lease.
Buildings with low open violation rates near the N train in NYC
Showing 3,439–3,456 of 4,661 buildings with low open violation rates near the N train in NYC.
350 W 50 St
Hell's Kitchen
101 West 55 Street
Midtown
414 West 44 Street
Hell's Kitchen
/-73.987662,40.763992,14/640x640@2x?access_token=pk.eyJ1Ijoib3BlbmlnbG9vIiwiYSI6ImNsYjNmMjVwdzBjeHgzd21wYmJmZDB0eGYifQ.XZvZCOh51yXuDBE-I3Bg0A)
355 West 51 Street
Hell's Kitchen
888 8 Avenue
Midtown
/-73.98152,40.733954,14/640x640@2x?access_token=pk.eyJ1Ijoib3BlbmlnbG9vIiwiYSI6ImNsYjNmMjVwdzBjeHgzd21wYmJmZDB0eGYifQ.XZvZCOh51yXuDBE-I3Bg0A)
340 East 18 Street
Gramercy Park
245 East 13 Street
East Village
188 2 Avenue
East Village
41-17 Crescent St
Long Island City
/-73.995483,40.755212,14/640x640@2x?access_token=pk.eyJ1Ijoib3BlbmlnbG9vIiwiYSI6ImNsYjNmMjVwdzBjeHgzd21wYmJmZDB0eGYifQ.XZvZCOh51yXuDBE-I3Bg0A)
400 W 37 St
Hudson Yards
210 East 22 Street
Gramercy Park
/-73.981853,40.735613,14/640x640@2x?access_token=pk.eyJ1Ijoib3BlbmlnbG9vIiwiYSI6ImNsYjNmMjVwdzBjeHgzd21wYmJmZDB0eGYifQ.XZvZCOh51yXuDBE-I3Bg0A)
304 East 20 Street
Gramercy Park
156 2 Avenue
East Village
/-73.992806,40.754651,14/640x640@2x?access_token=pk.eyJ1Ijoib3BlbmlnbG9vIiwiYSI6ImNsYjNmMjVwdzBjeHgzd21wYmJmZDB0eGYifQ.XZvZCOh51yXuDBE-I3Bg0A)
321 West 37 Street
Hudson Yards
155 East 52 Street
Turtle Bay
30-78 34 Street
Astoria
450 West 58 Street
Hell's Kitchen
27-37 27 Street
Astoria
What to check before for buildings with low open violation rates near the N train in NYC
- Use the low-open-violations filter as a screening step, then request the building’s most recent compliance/repair status directly.
- If a building looks good on paper, confirm logistics like move-in date, lease start, and whether any work is planned or underway.
- Read the building’s notes and tenant Q&A for patterns that aren’t always captured in open records (e.g., noise, hot-water reliability, pest prevention).
- Before signing, ask for timelines: when cited items were addressed and how management documents repairs.
- Budget beyond the rent: review fees, deposits, and any building-required charges before you commit. (Ask for totals in writing.)