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 5 days ago.
BUILDING AVERAGE:
0.12 violations per unit
NEW YORK CITY AVERAGE:
0.81 violation per unit
Non-hazardous
1
class A
i.e. no peephole on a door, or no street # on the building, unlawful keeping of animals
MOST RECENT:
Aug 24, 2024: § 27-2017.3 hmc: trace and repair the source and abate the visible mold condition... less than 10 square feet at ceiling at public hall, 4th story
Show all
Hazardous
0
class B
i.e. smoke detector issues, inadequate lighting, no lighting for stairways
MOST RECENT:
No violation found...
Show all
Immediately hazardous
0
class C
i.e. rodents, pest, mold, inadequate heat or hot water, defective building parts
MOST RECENT:
No violation found...
Show all
Missing information/filings
0
class I
Missing or non-compliant with administrative information orders or filings
MOST RECENT:
No violation found...
Show all
Property Owners and Associates
S
St Johns Place Units LLC
2.5(4)
Owner•
Corporate Owner•
Agent•
2 Properties•13 Units
Litigation History: Yes
Evictions: 0
S
South 1 Holdings LLC
3.6(79)
Owner•
Corporate Owner•
Agent•
43 Properties•315 Units
Litigation History: Yes
Evictions: 0
C
Charles Schwartz
3.6(83)
Site Manager•
Head Officer•
52 Properties•417 Units
Litigation History: Yes
Evictions: 0
Frequently Asked Questions
Renter Q&A
Be the first to ask a question!
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 (3)
2.25 stars
11 months ago
Generally unresponsive and building is neglected
Former Tenant
Pros:
It's a quiet building
Cons:
Issues are not responded to in a timely manner and the building is neglected
Advice to owner:
Take care of the building
2.25 stars
Over 2 years ago
Mostly problematic building and management
Former Tenant
Pros:
The apartment was freshly renovated when I moved in (but they never finished installing things like wall heaters)
Cons:
The utilities were messed up and providers couldn’t access the meters and inaccurate estimates ended up costing me nearly 10k while I was living there. (Ultimately it was returned by ConEd, but it was a process) the heat in the building was terrible. The management company refused to return my deposit because I didn’t fill out the “deposit return form” that they never mentioned and was only accessible by a link they had to send you. Management threatened me after moving out because I still needed pictures of the meters for ConEd to refund me for utilities overcharges based on their blocked meters.
Advice to owner:
Don’t threaten your tenants or previous tenants and don’t play shady games with peoples deposits; you have a legal obligation to return that to your tenants.
2.88 stars
Over 2 years ago
Loud during weekends
Former Tenant
Pros:
Convenient location, close to the subway, super markets, and laundromats.
Cons:
When I first moved in, our apartment has seen a bee hive and mice... It took some time to find out where the hive was, then remove it; and find out where mice come from and stuck up the hole. The management was responsible, but I wish they noticed these issues prior to tenants moved in.
Heat relies on AC, which cost a lot of $$$ in winter NYC and it is not that warm. I had to get a small heater to stay warm. (I'm not good with the cold at all...)
During the weekend and some weekday nights, there were people from other buildings nearby playing really loud pop music. So I often had to close my window even if it is in hot summer time. And I could still hear the music, even when the window was close.