Buildings highly rated for heat near transit in NYC
This page focuses on NYC buildings with high heat performance and easy access to transit: filter pair “best-heat” + “near-transit.” You’re viewing 3,782+ buildings that match the scope right now. Openigloo helps you narrow faster using building-level signals and renter-focused context. Use heat-related ratings and nearby-transit proximity, then read what people reported about comfort and reliability. You can also cross-check details using open-records indicators and ask tenant questions through the building’s page before you sign.
Buildings highly rated for heat near transit in NYC
Showing 199–216 of 3,782 buildings highly rated for heat near transit in NYC.
194 East 2 Street
East Village
31-57 31 Street
Astoria
1625 Putnam Avenue
Ridgewood
595 Baltic Street
Boerum Hill
240 West 73 Street
Upper West Side
1309 5 Avenue
South Harlem
195 Stanton Street
Lower East Side
515 9 Avenue
Hudson Yards
225 Schermerhorn St
Downtown Brooklyn
120 West 21 Street
Chelsea
460 West 42 Street
Hell's Kitchen
49 East 34 Street
Murray Hill
21 India Street
Greenpoint
450 W 17 St
West Chelsea
315 West 57 Street
Hell's Kitchen
345 East 94 Street
Yorkville
222 Johnson Avenue
Williamsburg
2 North 6 Place
Williamsburg
What to check before for buildings highly rated for heat near transit in NYC
- Expect buildings ranked for heat and located near subway/bus routes, so commuting time is usually shorter; still confirm the exact commute from the unit to your work/school.
- Before applying, ask the super/property manager how heat is controlled for your specific unit (thermostat access, radiator vs. forced air, and whether heat varies by floor/exposure).
- Check lease terms for heating responsibility and any energy-cost split, even if the building is rated well for heat.
- Confirm when and how repairs are handled during the heating season (who responds, typical timelines, and whether emergency heat outages qualify for faster service).
- Compare full move-in cost and monthly totals (utilities, deposits, and any one-time fees), since “heat quality” doesn’t always mean lower overall costs.