MORRIS 2025 HOLDINGS LLC owns or operates 2 buildings in New York City, totaling 56 units.
Across the 2-building portfolio, the average compliance score is 1.5 out of 5. 526 violations and 86 tenant complaints are on file — review The Record above for the full breakdown.
526 HPD/code violations and 1 DOB violations are recorded across MORRIS 2025 HOLDINGS LLC's buildings in New York City.
20 active housing-court cases are on file across MORRIS 2025 HOLDINGS LLC's buildings.
The lowest-rated buildings in MORRIS 2025 HOLDINGS LLC's portfolio are 2707 MORRIS AVENUE, 2705 MORRIS AVENUE, and —.
79% of MORRIS 2025 HOLDINGS LLC's units in New York City are registered as rent-stabilized with HPD.
In New York City, file repair complaints with HPD via 311 or hpdonline.nyc.gov. For lease or harassment issues, call the NYC Tenant Helpline at 311. Document repair requests in writing and keep dated copies for housing court.
Reviews submitted by tenants across every building in this portfolio. We aggregate the numbers, but surface the voices — good and bad — as pulled quotes.
“Pros: The super is a good man and works hard. Cons: The neighbors are noisy and the homeless take over the building. The owners are disrespectful to the tenants in that they post late rents on people’s doors exposing private information.…”
“Pros: The only thing to like about this building is if property management that is only going to take your money and NEVER EVER FIX ANYTHING, drugs, prostitution, gang shoot outs, robberies, & the occasional sidewalk cookout is your thing.…”
— 2705 MORRIS AVENUE · BronxHow MORRIS 2025 HOLDINGS LLC shows up on public housing records.
Full ownership history (ACRIS deeds, prior sales, linked LLCs) ships in a later pass — some portfolios span dozens of entities that take time to reconcile.
Every time a tenant calls 311, an inspector cites a violation, or a case lands in housing court, it shows up here. The numbers below aggregate across the entire portfolio.
Adjudicated DOB / ECB cases across this portfolio. Every ticket that went to adjudication — paid, dismissed, or defaulted.
This landlord owns or manages 2 buildings across New York City. The portfolio sits below average on compliance for the city.