Building complaint and pricing history broken down by month.
The latest rodent inspection reports.
Existing or upcoming construction projects in the building and area.
And more...
Open Violations
A violation is issued to a building when a city inspector from
NYC's Department of Housing Preservation and Development validates and confirms a complaint made to 311.
The violations listed below are open violations that have yet to be addressed or have not been confirmed
as resolved by the city.
Only open violations from the last 10 years.
Data last updated 3 months ago.
BUILDING AVERAGE:
-- violations per unit
NEW YORK CITY AVERAGE:
0.81 violation per unit
Non-hazardous
0
class A
i.e. no peephole on a door, or no street # on the building, unlawful keeping of animals
MOST RECENT:
No violation found...
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Hazardous
0
class B
i.e. smoke detector issues, inadequate lighting, no lighting for stairways
MOST RECENT:
No violation found...
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Immediately hazardous
0
class C
i.e. rodents, pest, mold, inadequate heat or hot water, defective building parts
MOST RECENT:
No violation found...
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Missing information/filings
0
class I
Missing or non-compliant with administrative information orders or filings
MOST RECENT:
No violation found...
Show all
Frequently Asked Questions
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Building Ratings
Cleanliness
1 (unmanaged) to 5 (well managed)
Garbage Management
1 (poorly managed) to 5 (well organized)
Heat
1 (faulty) to 5 (working)
Neighbors
1 (loud / disrespectful) to 5 (friendly and considerate)
Noise Levels
1 (loud) to 5 (quiet)
Owner Responsiveness
1 (slow) to 5 (timely)
Pest Control
1 (lots of pests) to 5 (no pests)
Water Pressure
1 (weak) to 5 (strong)
Cleanliness
Garbage Management
Heat
Neighbors
Noise Levels
Owner Responsiveness
Pest Control
Water Pressure
Renter Recommendations
--% of renters recommend this building
--% of renters approve of this owner
Rents and Deposits
-- of renters received their security deposits back
It HAS NOT been reported if this building accepts electronic rent payments.
Reviews (1)
4.88 stars
Over 1 year ago
2yr Bard Hall Living
Former Tenant
Pros:
It's owned by Bard Graduate Center (BGC), so the entire building is occupied by students, faculty, and staff from the program. You mostly know everyone you ride the elevator with, pass in the entrance, or share the common spaces with. The facilities staff is pretty responsive, and in general the place stays clean. (I wouldn't eat off the floor, but the building is cleaner than a lot of other places I've seen in the city.)
Cons:
There are a handful of vacant units in the building that BGC uses for visiting/resident scholars and lecturers, and they also rent those units out to parents/visitors of building residents and occasionally those visitors can be a bit loud. But that's as bad as it gets honestly.
Advice to owner:
Keep all the short-term rental/vacant units for visitors on the lower floors, preferably all on the same floor. It takes away from the community feeling to live next to one of the visiting scholars who only stay for a few months, or its a short-term rental and there are always different people coming and going.