200 WEST 67TH STREET OWNER LLC · avg 3.9 ★★★★★ · New York City
“Pros: This is a beautiful building in an amazing location on the corner of West 67th and Amsterdam. It has its own private driveway, which makes pickups/dropoffs super easy and safe. Incredible views from inside units. Cons: New management bought the building in 2024 and decided to make some cosmetic changes to the building, which were okay in theory. None of the changes actually improved the building, in fact, many of them made the building look worse and/or cheapened the original look of the building, which was designed by a great architect not too long ago. The units are on the smaller side, which is fine, given this is not uncommon with NYC apartments, but new ownership decided to steeply increase the rental rates for these smaller units (which were already more expensive than other larger apartments in the area) making them a poor value for existing + new tenants. The other drawback of living is here that most of the staff are not friendly/ helpful. There are a few staff that residents really like, however, the others should not be working at a building where the rents are this high. When residents are paying rents this high, they expect the staff to not be rude/ unhelpful. Advice to landlord: Get residents feedback on how new management is performing - it is not positive.”
— 150 AMSTERDAM AVENUE · Manhattan“Pros: Clean, new, well-run building in a great neighborhood. Finished are great. Quality of construction is great. Cons: Rents going up exorbitantly given the layout and lack of really at-par amenities for a building of its size and cost. Small (but clean, nice) gym, and really spartan, unpleasant outdoor space. Not other shared areas worth talking about unless you play piano.”
— 150 AMSTERDAM AVENUE · Manhattan“Pros: Nice views of sunset Cons: Horrible management Air quality is so bad Advice to landlord: Do your job”
“Pros: The apartments are nice and large with good views of the city - depending on the floor and exposure. Maintenance is very responsive (they replaced a broken fridge at 9pm once). Convenient location. Cons: They raised my rent by 30% from one year to the other. Management and building staff are pretty unfriendly. The amenities are pretty basic for a luxury building.”
— 150 AMSTERDAM AVENUE · Manhattan“Pros: great location in a residential spot Cons: not much going on in the UWS”
— 150 AMSTERDAM AVENUE · Manhattan“Pros: Staff are all very nice, apartment is lovely. Cons: Relatively high rent increases, noisy especially on Amsterdam side.”
— 150 AMSTERDAM AVENUE · Manhattan“Pros: Location Units are clean Nice driveway Good amenities such as gym, storage Nice concierge and doorman Cons: - Air pressure in the building causes doors to slam and make it hard to open - too expensive. Building is now market rate and 1bd now commands 7k-8k which is ridiculous”
— 150 AMSTERDAM AVENUE · Manhattan“Pros: Clean and well kept building and grounds. Convenient location. Cons: HVAC system not so great. Rooms get very cold and hot easily. Space gets dusty very quickly too. We had ceiling water leaks multiple times that took long time for repair and damaged our furniture. Overpriced for small kitchen and bathroom with average finishes. Appliances and shower fittings often malfunction and break. Not so much storage space. Something wrong with building pressurization - makes it very hard to open and close windows, elevator shafts are always extremely noisy with wind sound.”
— 150 AMSTERDAM AVENUE · Manhattan“Pros: Upper floors have amazing views. Amenities are nice and the units are fairly modern compared to a lot of NYC apartments. Great location with good access to the 1 2 and 3 lines. Cons: Moved in Summer 2021, rent got bumped 40% on our renewal. Finishes aren't bad but slightly dated. Advice to landlord: Don't boot people with such large rent increases year over year”
— 150 AMSTERDAM AVENUE · Manhattan“Pros: Great amenities, views. High marks for service and staff. Cons: Management is unrealistic about rents in more recent pandemic driven market where vacancy has risen by at least 10% in the building. Have been slow to re-open common spaces and gym. Have not made efforts to improve the units. This should all be factored into rent reductions. Advice to landlord: You market the building as luxury, go above and beyond for tenants now, while they will be home more. Offer more in unit enhancements, (higher quality WiFi, supplemental air filtration as during the winter the apartments are very dry with limited operating windows due to winds), maybe convert some additional space to common work areas/desks.”
— 150 AMSTERDAM AVENUE · Manhattan