Compared to median rents in 11231, Brooklyn
Latest data: February 2026. This building has not been actively listed recently.
Studio
$3,437/mo
1BR
$4,360/mo
2BR
$7,150/mo
3BR
$10,455/mo
4BR+
$16,000/mo
Based on listing data
Potential savings: ~38% by timing your move
Based on HUD Fair Market Rent estimates for this ZIP code
of tenants recommend
Based on 2 verified reviews
“Unit 1 Pros: Great location. Court Street is noisy but other than that, and the very shady 359 Court St. next door, it’s a fantastic location. Cons:”
— Anonymous, Apr 2024
“Pros: - Location & apartment size Cons: - As of October, 2024 the three-unit building has 200+ open HPD violations, including literally dozens of B C”
— Anonymous, Apr 2023
20 questions answered
Based on recent listing data, rent for a studio at 357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 ranges from $2,703 to $3,657 per month, with a median of $3,180.
Based on recent listing data, rent for a 1-bedroom at 357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 ranges from $2,822 to $3,818 per month, with a median of $3,320.
Based on recent listing data, rent for a 2-bedroom at 357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 ranges from $3,128 to $4,232 per month, with a median of $3,680.
Based on recent listing data, rent for a 3-bedroom at 357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 ranges from $3,902 to $5,279 per month, with a median of $4,590.
Based on recent listing data, rent for a 4-bedroom at 357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 ranges from $4,208 to $5,693 per month, with a median of $4,950.
Based on available records, 357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 is not currently registered as rent stabilized. Rents at this building are likely set at market rate.
The registered owner of 357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 is 357 COURT REALTY LLC. You can view their full portfolio of buildings on Lucid Rents.
357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231, owned by 357 COURT REALTY LLC, has an overall grade of C (2.0/5) on Lucid Rents. The building has 245 recorded violations. Tenants have left 2 reviews. Check tenant reviews for firsthand experiences.
357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 has an overall grade of C with a score of 2.0 out of 5 on Lucid Rents. This score is based on violations, complaints, and tenant reviews.
Yes, 357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 has 245 housing violations and 121 complaints on record. Visit the building page on Lucid Rents to see the full history, including violation classes and complaint types.
357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 has 1 building permit on record. Recent permit types include: General Construction. Building permits can indicate ongoing construction or renovation work.
Yes, 357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 has 6 Department of Buildings violations on record. These can include issues related to construction safety, building codes, and structural concerns.
357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 has 6 litigations on record with the housing agency. Case types include: Access Warrant - Non-Lead, Heat and Hot Water, Tenant Action.
357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 offers 1 amenities including Pet Friendly. View the full amenity list on the building page.
357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 lists pet-friendly amenities (Pet Friendly) and 1 tenant review confirmed it as pet friendly. Contact the building management to confirm current pet policies and any breed or size restrictions.
There are 6 schools near 357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231, including 2 charter schools, 2 colleges, 2 private schools. Nearby schools include Pave Academy Charter School (12 min walk), Summit Academy Charter School (11 min walk), Long Island Col Hosp Sch Nursing (5 min walk), St Francis College (16 min walk), Basis Independent Brooklyn (18 min walk), and more.
357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 has 3 transit options nearby. The closest include: bus: 3 AV/27 ST (B37), 1.5 mi away.
The 11231 zip code where 357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 is located has 1,791 crime incidents on record. Check the neighborhood report card for 11231 for a full breakdown by crime type.
357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 was built in 1931, has 4 floors, contains 4 total units, 3 of which are residential.
357 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NY, 11231 has 2 tenant reviews with an average rating of 2.0 out of 5. 0 out of 2 reviewers would recommend this building.
Anonymous
1 years ago
Unit 1 Pros: Great location. Court Street is noisy but other than that, and the very shady 359 Court St. next door, it’s a fantastic location. Cons: • New owner purchased building in 2023 and unlawfully attempted a ~40% rent increase within 30 days - no other option given - despite the legal protections to all of the tenants who at the time had all lived here for 6+ years • No proper written notification of building sale or whereabouts of security deposits • Tenants together secured an attorney who advised registering complaints with the city • complaints were more or less immediately investigated and over 60 violations were initially certified, later jumping to over 200 violations - many of them C Class, aka urgent and dangerous - for a building with only three apartments • Landlord unlawfully retaliated with lease terminations for all tenants • Landlord requested access multiple times to “inspect” only to be a no-show • Tenants include two sets of young parents, three children under the age of six, and a senior citizen (bear this in mind as you read on) • NYC issued multiple lead paint violations for the two apartments with children and the landlord has still done absolutely nothing about it • Two out of three apartments (one with a young mother to a <1 year old undergoing cancer treatment and surgeries) did not have heat until December 21 - almost nine months after the landlord closed on the building. They got heat only after the city had conducted multiple inspections to litigate and obtain a lock-break warrant on the retail space to access the boiler (there is still no boiler access). The third apartment (the one with two kids under 6) didn’t get heat until February 2nd and only because the first court date was approaching and the landlord wanted to look less flagrantly inhumane in court. • When one tenant unintentionally met the landlord, the landlord reprimanded him and the other tenants for making complaints to the city, blamed the tenants for the violations, and told the tenant to go f*ck himself after the tenant explained that his wife, a new mother, had just gone through five months of chemotherapy (without heat) • As the first housing court date approached, the landlord scheduled inspections of each apartment with a contractor to assess violations and schedule repairs. Instead, landlord showed up with the alleged contractor, made no inspections and scheduled no repairs. His approach was to try to cajole tenants into dropping our attorney to deal with him directly because he’s “a reasonable guy” (this is after a year of owning the building). • Meanwhile the landlord had a multiperson crew renovating the retail space for 8+ weeks while ignoring all the residential violations for a year • Mice became a major problem - one tenant has video of a mouse in his sleeping baby’s crib - and the landlord begrudgingly sent an exterminator who did the absolute bare minimum (another violation was issued thereafter) • The only repair the landlord has made: he sent a couple guys to reinstall a kitchen cabinet that suddenly crashed off the wall above one tenant’s stove while that tenant was cooking dinner. The cabinet almost crushed the tenant’s two-year old and left a live wire exposed from the range hood that also fell. Almost a week passed before the landlord had it repaired. • Meanwhile NYC HPD has done the following: abated lead-painted walls, installed window guards, fixed doors, installed a new hallway floor, fixed gaping leaking ceiling holes, and replaced a bathroom floor through which a tenant’s foot plunged because it was in such bad shape • etc etc etc Advice to landlord: Get a therapist, stop pretending you’re a decent human being or renounce your pathetic ways and maybe become one
Anonymous
2 years ago
Pros: - Location & apartment size Cons: - As of October, 2024 the three-unit building has 200+ open HPD violations, including literally dozens of B Class and C Class violations (C Class designates immediately hazardous) - Visible structural issues (slanting floors, doors, water damage and leaks inside and outside of apartments) - Major flooring issues inside apartment (torn vinyl, holes in wooden floor under broken vinyl) - New owner (purchased circa April 2023) has finally (as of October 2024) done some shoddy superficial improvements in hallways (paint already peeling) and did demolition and construction including washer/dryer and dishwasher installs without a permit on the cheap in Apt 1 (in other words gas and electric alterations without a permit that were never inspected, and workers were instructed to refuse inspectors entry during construction and thus did refuse entry) - Many electrical abnormalities - flickering lights etc. - Window, insulation, heating issues in Apts 1 and 2 - Major leaks in hallways and residential units - NYC HPD issued so many C Class violations that were outright ignored by the landlord (including for example lead paint abatement in apartments with children) that the City sent its own contractors to execute repairs and charge the landlord - Etc Advice to landlord: Be a better person (the bar is low)
(A) § HMC:FILE ANNUAL BEDBUG REPORT IN ACCORDANCE WITH HPD RULE AS DESCRIBED ON THE BACK OF THIS NOTICE OF VIOLATION OR AS DESCRIBED ON HPDS WEBSITE, WWW.NYC.GOV\HPD, SEARCH BED BUGS.
§ 27-2040 ADM CODE PROVIDE ADEQUATE LIGHTING AT OR NEAR THE OUTSIDE OF THE FRONT ENTRANCEWAY OF THE BUILDING AND KEEP SAME BURNING FROM SUNSET EVERY DAY TO SUNRISE ON THE DAY FOLLOWING 100 WATT INCANDENSCENT OR EQUIVALENT
§ 27-2005, 27-2007, 27-2041.1 HMC, §238, § 309; § 107 (2) ( C) MDL AND 28 RCNY §25-171: REPLACE OR REPAIR THE SELF-CLOSING DOORS THAT IS MISSING OR DEFECTIVE HINGES AT BUILDING ENTRANCE DOOR , 1st STORY
§ 27-2005, 27-2007, 27-2041.1 HMC, §238, § 309; § 107 (2) ( C) MDL AND 28 RCNY §25-171: REPLACE OR REPAIR THE SELF-CLOSING DOORS THAT IS MISSING OR DEFECTIVE AT BUILDING ENTRANCE DOOR, HINGES , 1st STORY
§ 27-2104 ADM CODE POST AND MAINTAIN A PROPER SIGN ON WALL OF ENTRANCE STORY SHOWING THE REGISTRATION NUMBER ASSIGNED BY THE DEPARTMENT AND THE ADDRESS OF THE BUILDING. AT PUBLIC HALL, 1st STORY