Apartments with Outdoor SpaceGreenwich Village, Manhattan

Apartments with Outdoor Space in Greenwich Village, Manhattan (2026)

Private outdoor space is a premium NYC amenity. Options include balconies (small, typically 40-80 sqft), terraces (larger, 100+ sqft), rooftops (often shared but sometimes private), and ground-floor gardens (most rare). Expect a 10-25% rent premium for genuine private outdoor access. In Greenwich Village specifically, the neighborhood scores well on livability — with 4 subway stations nearby.

Greenwich Village at a glance

Livability
7.2/10
Median price
Subway stations
4
Borough rank
#5/33

A 7.2 composite neighborhood that trades quiet and cultural density for exceptional commute access, functional density, and integrated green space—ideal if you work downtown or in Midtown and accept street-level noise as the cost of walkability.

What to look for in a outdoor space apartment in Greenwich Village

Greenwich Village has a specific housing profile that affects your outdoor space search. The practical infrastructure is strong, and the building stock includes budget-friendly options. These are the considerations that matter most here:

  • Private vs shared outdoor space (shared rooftops are common, private rare)
  • Direction the space faces (south-facing gets most sun)
  • Furniture load limits on older balconies
  • Rooftop access hours and rules
  • Garden-level privacy versus street-level exposure

How to verify a outdoor space listing

Listings often over-promise on amenities. Before you sign a lease for a claimed outdoor space apartment in Greenwich Village, run through this verification checklist:

  • Physically access the outdoor space during your viewing
  • Check if the landlord requires permission for furniture, plants, or grilling
  • Verify the load rating of balconies (especially in pre-war buildings)
  • Ask about shared rooftop access hours and reservation policies
  • Look for drainage and flooring condition on terraces

About Greenwich Village, Manhattan

Greenwich Village street life moves faster than West Village—you're in the commercial core of downtown Manhattan, where Washington Square Park's gravity pulls foot traffic through tree-lined blocks that feel established but worn. The buildings here are shorter, older rowhouses mixed with 6-8 story walk-ups and some postwar apartment buildings; you'll see more restaurants, bars, and storefronts than residential entrances. The neighborhood has absorbed decades of bohemia, counterculture history, and now functions as a transitional zone between NYU's campus density to the north and the quieter historic streets below. You experience this as constant ambient activity—weekday mornings have commuters and students, afternoons shift to local workers and tourists, evenings and weekends blur into a social neighborhood where outdoor seating and street-level commerce create background noise that doesn't really stop. What defines living here specifically is proximity without peace. You're 218 meters on average from five parks—James J Walker Park, Jefferson Market Garden, the AIDS Memorial at St. Vincent's Triangle—and wrapped in 190 trees with a canopy density of 9.5/10, so green space is genuinely present in your block-by-block experience. But the noise score of 9/10 reflects that this density and accessibility comes with constant street sound: sirens, delivery trucks, groups of people, construction. The neighborhood is practically excellent (9/10 score)—bodegas, laundries, pharmacies, restaurants exist at density—but you're not getting the quieter charm of deeper West Village; you're getting the convenience and energy of a neighborhood that's been continuously inhabited and used for over a century.

Greenwich Village scores 7.2/10 overall on DwellCheck's livability index, ranking #5 of 33 in Manhattan. Rent prices in Greenwich Village vary widely; check specific listings for current market rates. Greenwich Village has 4 subway stations within walking distance: 14 St/8 Av, W 4 St-Wash Sq, 14 St/6 Av.

Greenwich Village averages 190 trees within 200m of each address, with a canopy density score of 9.5/10. Nearest major parks: James J Walker Park, Corporal John A. Seravalli Playground, Bleecker Playground (avg 218m away).

Who Greenwich Village is best for

Early-career professionals with long commutes to Midtown or downtown

Commute score of 8.5/10 with direct A/C/E access at 14 St and 1/2/3 at 14 St-6 Av. You can reach Penn Station or the Financial District in under 20 minutes without transfers.

People who need functional neighborhood infrastructure without paying for quiet

Practical score of 9/10 means every daily service is walkable. You'll find groceries, pharmacies, hardware, dry cleaning within 2-3 blocks. Transit redundancy (6 separate subway stations within 400m) means backup options always exist.

Renters comfortable with noise and street activity who prioritize walkability and park access

High canopy density (9.5/10) and 5 parks averaging 218m away mean green space is genuinely integrated into daily life. The noise score of 9/10 is the tradeoff—this is an active, used neighborhood, not a quiet one.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I know about finding a outdoor space place in Greenwich Village?

Greenwich Village pricing varies by block and building. Greenwich Village ranks #5/33 in Manhattan on livability (7.2/10). Known for washington square park and nyu campus, Greenwich Village has a rental market where outdoor space options depend heavily on building era and management. A 7.2 composite neighborhood that trades quiet and cultural density for exceptional commute access, functional density, and integrated green space—ideal if you work downtown or in Midtown and accept street-level noise as the cost of walkability.

How much should I expect to pay in Greenwich Village?

Pricing in Greenwich Village 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 Greenwich Village actually a good fit for someone looking for a outdoor space apartment?

Depends on your priorities. Greenwich Village scores 9/10 on practical livability and 8.5/10 on commute access. It tends to work best for early-career professionals with long commutes to midtown or downtown. The outdoor space inventory specifically depends on building stock, which you can verify address by address.

How do I get around from Greenwich Village?

You have 4 subway stations within walking distance. The closest are 14 St/8 Av (A/C/E/L) and W 4 St-Wash Sq (A/B/C/D/E/F/M). Transit access here is strong.

What about safety in Greenwich Village?

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 Greenwich Village?

Greenwich Village averages 190 trees within 200m of each address, with James J Walker Park about 218m away. The outdoor score is 6.9/10. There is some green space, though it is not the area's strongest feature.

What ZIP code covers Greenwich Village?

Greenwich Village falls in 10014 (West Village / Greenwich Village).

Check a specific Greenwich Village 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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