Unit 8C Pros: The staff is the absolute friendliest. They know you by name and are very responsive when you have issues with anything in the building. The amenities and location are unmatched. The pool is open during he…
500 WEST 43 STREET, Manhattan, NY, 10036 is a 313-unit rental building in Midtown West, NYC. See every violation, 311 complaint, tenant review, and the LucidIQ score — before you sign a lease.
Unit 8C Pros: The staff is the absolute friendliest. They know you by name and are very responsive when you have issues with anything in the building. The amenities and location are unmatched. The pool is open during he…
Pros: The doormen were simply the best. In fact, all the hands on staff were great. Not a ton of rentals in the building but they have good layouts, but they are largely dated. Overall liked my time here a lot Cons: AIB…
Pros: Building is great. Staff is very friendly, knows everybody's names. Great amenities, very responsive. Cons: Landlord was a complete nightmare to deal with as this was a condo building. Blamed me for the aftermath…
Asking rent per bedroom type — switch tabs to see each with effective (concession-net) rent.
Portfolio-level grade reflects the landlord's buildings across NYC, weighted by unit count. Individual building grades may differ.
View full landlord profileTop 1 by score · of 2 total
ACRIS deeds and regulatory filings
Lead — Lead Kit Request (Residential) (L10)
Noise - Residential — Loud Music/Party
Lead — Lead Kit Request (Residential) (L10)
Dirty Condition — Trash
Noise - Street/Sidewalk — Loud Music/Party
General Construction/Plumbing — Debris - Falling Or In Danger Of Falling
Noise - Street/Sidewalk — Loud Music/Party
Water System — Fire Hydrant Emergency (FHE)
Noise — Noise: Construction Equipment (NC1)
Noise - Street/Sidewalk — Loud Music/Party
Monthly counts over the last 7 years · all data sources
No HPD records on file in the last 7 years.
Manhattan · March 2026
Best & worst months to sign a lease
Potential savings: ~10% by timing your move to June.
Hell's Kitchen has transformed from a rough-and-tumble neighborhood into a thriving, diverse community with excellent restaurant row, strong LGBTQ+ presence, and easy access to Midtown without Midtown prices.