No published reviews yet. Be the first to tell future tenants what it's really like to live here.
910 Post St is a rental building in Independence Heights, Houston. See every violation, 311 complaint, tenant review, and the LucidIQ score — before you sign a lease.
No published reviews yet. Be the first to tell future tenants what it's really like to live here.
Portfolio-level grade reflects the landlord's buildings across the city, weighted by unit count. Individual building grades may differ.
View full landlord profileTop 5 by score · of 7 total
ACRIS deeds and regulatory filings
Water Leak
Sewer Wastewater — Caller is reporting neighbor @ 910 Post St to have placed a line in the cleanout / has seage backing up from cleanout an
Minimum Standards — nuisance the citizen states that the property is falling apart and there is a hole in the floor of the closet in the bed
Nuisance On Property — Nuisance high grass and weeds.
Nuisance On Property — high grass and trash and brush on the fence vacant property
Dangerous Building — vacant building not boarded and leaning per citizen
Nuisance On Property — NULL
HPD Class DON - 1 - Nuisance Violation — Permitting the existence of weeds, brush, rubbish, and all other objectionable, unsightly, and unsanitary matter of what
DOB Violation — Open storage of any dead trees, trash, or refuse, motor vehicle, boat, refrigerator
DOB Violation — Open storage of any dead trees, trash, or refuse, motor vehicle, boat, refrigerator
Monthly counts over the last 7 years · all data sources
Permitting the existence of weeds, brush, rubbish, and all other objectionable, unsightly, and unsanitary matter of whatever nature covering or partly covering the surface of any lots or parcels. — Ord: 10-451(b)(10)*
Houston · March 2026
Best & worst months to sign a lease
Potential savings: ~23% by timing your move to January.
Asking rent per bedroom type — switch tabs to see each with effective (concession-net) rent.
Independence Heights is historically the first Black municipality in Texas — a neighborhood of modest homes, deep community pride, and increasing investment. It borders the Heights and stands at a crossroads of preservation and change.