Elevator Buildings • Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan
Elevator Buildings in Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan (2026)
NYC elevator buildings are standard in post-1929 construction but can be rare in pre-war and tenement neighborhoods. Elevator access affects accessibility, moving costs, rent, and day-to-day convenience. The NYC Multiple Dwelling Law of 1929 required elevators in buildings over six stories. In Hell's Kitchen specifically, the market is competitive but manageable — with 2 subway stations nearby.
Hell's Kitchen at a glance
Hell's Kitchen scores 6.7/10 median: excellent for practical living and transit access, but high noise, rising crime, and midtown congestion are real trade-offs.
What to look for in a elevator apartment in Hell's Kitchen
Hell's Kitchen has a specific housing profile that affects your elevator search. The practical infrastructure is strong, and the building stock includes budget-friendly options. These are the considerations that matter most here:
- •Elevator reliability — check DOB elevator inspection records for outage history
- •Maintenance fees may be passed through in rent or billed separately in co-ops
- •Freight elevator availability for moving day (some buildings charge for reservation)
- •Wait times during peak morning hours in older buildings with single elevators
- •Emergency stair access and elevator outage contingency plans
How to verify a elevator listing
Listings often over-promise on amenities. Before you sign a lease for a claimed elevator apartment in Hell's Kitchen, run through this verification checklist:
- ✓Check DOB elevator inspection records at a810-dobnow.nyc.gov
- ✓Test the elevator during your viewing — listen for unusual noises
- ✓Ask about recent outages, repairs, and upcoming maintenance work
- ✓Verify if the freight elevator is operational for moving day logistics
- ✓Tour during morning rush hour to see how long the elevator wait actually is
Want a deeper dive? Read our full How to Look Up NYC Building Complaints guide.
About Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan
Hell's Kitchen is a dense, transit-rich midtown corridor where you're never far from a subway line—the A, B, C, D, and 1 trains all converge within walking distance—and the neighborhood's 160 trees per 200 meters provide genuine canopy cover (9.5/10 density) that softens the urban grid. You'll navigate mostly mid-rise walk-ups (74% of the 575 tracked buildings) with pockets of higher density, flanked by Riverside Park to the west and Jackie Robinson Park to the north. The street level buzzes: Restaurant Row draws crowds, Broadway theaters anchor the cultural spine, and Hudson Yards looms as a constant backdrop. Noise and foot traffic define the sensory experience—9,892 noise complaints in the past year reflect that density.
Hell's Kitchen scores 6.7/10 overall on DwellCheck's livability index, ranking #18 of 33 in Manhattan. Rent prices in Hell's Kitchen vary widely; check specific listings for current market rates. Hell's Kitchen has 2 subway stations within walking distance: 155 St, 145 St.
Hell's Kitchen averages 160 trees within 200m of each address, with a canopy density score of 9.5/10. Nearest major parks: Riverside Park, Jackie Robinson Park, Alexander Hamilton Playground (avg 370m away).
Subway stations near Hell's Kitchen
Who Hell's Kitchen is best for
Commute score of 6.5 is dragged down by Manhattan's congestion, but you have direct access to five subway lines (A, B, C, D, 1) within 300m—practical infrastructure that works daily
Practical score of 9/10 (highest in the borough) means supermarkets, laundry, bodegas, and essentials are genuinely accessible; ideal if your workplace is Hudson Yards, Midtown, or Times Square
Outdoor score of 6.5 is driven by Riverside Park proximity and high tree canopy (9.5/10); you're above borough median on greenspace despite dense development
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I know about finding a elevator place in Hell's Kitchen?
Hell's Kitchen pricing varies by block and building. Hell's Kitchen ranks #18/33 in Manhattan on livability (6.7/10). Known for restaurant row and broadway proximity, Hell's Kitchen has a rental market where elevator options depend heavily on building era and management. Hell's Kitchen scores 6.7/10 median: excellent for practical living and transit access, but high noise, rising crime, and midtown congestion are real trade-offs.
How much should I expect to pay in Hell's Kitchen?
Pricing in Hell's Kitchen varies widely by block, building age, and floor. Manhattan is a large borough with significant rent variation — always compare at least 3-4 listings before committing.
Is Hell's Kitchen actually a good fit for someone looking for a elevator apartment?
Depends on your priorities. Hell's Kitchen scores 9/10 on practical livability and 6.5/10 on commute access. It tends to work best for public transit commuters. The elevator inventory specifically depends on building stock, which you can verify address by address.
How do I get around from Hell's Kitchen?
You have 2 subway stations within walking distance. The closest are 155 St (C) and 145 St (1/A/B/C/D). Commute times to Manhattan are moderate.
What about safety in Hell's Kitchen?
Block-by-block variation is significant — two addresses a quarter mile apart can have very different safety profiles. Manhattan averages 280 reported incidents per 300m radius and 1 shooting incidents per 500m. The only way to know for a specific address is to check the NYPD data within a walking radius.
Are there parks or green space near Hell's Kitchen?
Hell's Kitchen averages 160 trees within 200m of each address, with Riverside Park about 370m away. The outdoor score is 6.5/10. There is some green space, though it is not the area's strongest feature.
What ZIP code covers Hell's Kitchen?
Hell's Kitchen falls in 10019 (Midtown / Hell's Kitchen).
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Check a specific Hell's Kitchen address
Neighborhood averages are a starting point. Every NYC apartment building has unique violations, complaint history, and livability characteristics. Enter any address for a block-level analysis.
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