Unit 4I Pros: nothing, everything needs to be fixed Cons: disgusting, everything is dirty and new neighbors have no respect Advice to landlord: get better management
152 AVENUE D, Manhattan, NY, 10009 is a 743-unit rental building in East Village, NYC. See every violation, 311 complaint, tenant review, and the LucidIQ score — before you sign a lease.
Unit 4I Pros: nothing, everything needs to be fixed Cons: disgusting, everything is dirty and new neighbors have no respect Advice to landlord: get better management
Pros: Utilities included and walking distance to good neighborhoods Cons: Sounds travel from outside and it’s always noisy out there. Can’t sleep.
Pros: Rent but otherwise nothing else Cons: Rats running rampant at night around the building, always dirty, elevator would break down and not get fixed, maintenance team doesn’t respond fast enough, smoking in building…
Asking rent per bedroom type — switch tabs to see each with effective (concession-net) rent.
Manhattan · February 2026
Best & worst months to sign a lease
Potential savings: ~9% by timing your move to January.
Monthly counts over the last 7 years · all data sources
No HPD records on file in the last 7 years.
Portfolio-level grade reflects the landlord's buildings across NYC, weighted by unit count. Individual building grades may differ.
View full landlord profileTop 5 by score · of 1666 total
ACRIS deeds and regulatory filings
Noise - Street/Sidewalk — Loud Music/Party
Noise - Residential — Loud Talking
Noise - Street/Sidewalk — Loud Talking
Illegal Parking — Posted Parking Sign Violation
Noise — Noise: Construction Before/After Hours (NM1)
Noise - Street/Sidewalk — Loud Music/Party
Noise - Street/Sidewalk — Loud Music/Party
Noise - Street/Sidewalk — Loud Music/Party
Noise - Residential — Loud Music/Party
Noise - Street/Sidewalk — Loud Music/Party
Alphabet City — Avenues A through D — is the East Village's grittier, more residential sibling. Community gardens dot the blocks, Tompkins Square Park anchors the social scene, and the Dominican and Puerto Rican roots run deep alongside newer craft cocktail spots.