Rent stabilization signal
Not confirmed
LeaseSnap did not find a rent-stabilized match in the public building dataset used for this page.
Official-data building page
Use this page to connect public building signals to the lease questions that matter before you sign. LeaseSnap publishes these pages only when the building has enough official public-data coverage to support a useful renter-focused review.
Rent stabilization signal
Not confirmed
LeaseSnap did not find a rent-stabilized match in the public building dataset used for this page.
HPD open violations
5
Open violation totals come from cached public building-context data.
Heat complaints (12 months)
32
Heat and hot-water complaint trends can shape the habitability questions a renter asks before signing.
Active permits or recent work
4
Permits can be a useful signal for noise, construction disruption, or recent building activity.
Executed evictions (12 months)
1
This page uses only official public counts, not allegations or user-generated complaints.
1BR neighborhood rent context
$3,400
Latest neighborhood comparison uses the most recent public comparable-rent record available.
Match the lease address, rent amount, and apartment identifier against the listing and every payment request before signing.
Review rider language for entry rights, repairs, penalties, and any building-specific rules that could affect daily life.
Because this building shows habitability-related signals in public data, ask sharper questions about repairs, heat, hot water, and how issues are documented.
Because public data suggests active or recent construction, review quiet-hours, access, and disruption-related language before signing.
Because public eviction data is present, keep the lease, notices, and landlord communications organized from the start.
This page uses official and public building context only. It does not publish user-generated accusations, private lease content, landlord gossip, or community-post excerpts.
The goal is to help renters ask better lease questions before signing, not to rate or label a building with a simple good-or-bad score.
Last page refresh: 2/28/2026
LeaseSnap publishes building pages only when a building has enough official public-data coverage to support a useful renter-focused review page. This page uses public records only.
No. It is a starting point for lease review and building research, not a verdict. LeaseSnap does not publish allegations or unverified community claims on these public pages.
Match the lease address, rent amount, and apartment identifier against the listing and every payment request before signing.
Not necessarily, but tenants should still review regulation clues and ask questions if the paperwork seems inconsistent.
No. LeaseSnap provides an evidence-first starting point using public data and your lease, but it does not provide legal advice or representation.