Tenants who won a lottery to live at Fifteen Hudson Yards are suing the developer for violating New York City’s “poor door” ban, which bans separate entrances for low-income residents.
Source: Inman News
Low-income tenants sue developer, allege ‘poor door’ discrimination
More from 15 Hudson YardsMore posts in 15 Hudson Yards »
More from Fair Housing ActMore posts in Fair Housing Act »
- Amid MRED feud, Zillow says private listings ‘reinforce segregation’
- Government shutdown nails housing programs in Week 2
- How Charlie Kirk’s assassination could impact real estate
- Appraisal bias suit against Rocket Mortgage, Solidifi moves forward
- Texas bans some foreign buyers from purchasing real estate
More from Fair housing regulationsMore posts in Fair housing regulations »
More from new york postMore posts in new york post »
- DOJ opens criminal investigation into Fed Governor Lisa Cook
- FHFA Director Pulte calls on Congress to investigate Fed Chair Jerome Powell
- Breakfast at Tiffany’s pad goes on sale. Little black dress not included
- $32M Beverly Hills property hits the market, but it’s just a basement
- Most wildfire victims won’t return to Palisades, Josh Altman says
More from NYC luxury real estateMore posts in NYC luxury real estate »
More from nyc real estateMore posts in nyc real estate »
- ‘He didn’t even say he was sorry’: Brooklyn investor gets prison time for 12-year deed fraud scheme
- Lesson Learned: Do what’s right for everyone (including yourself)
- Lesson Learned: Stay levelheaded, unflappable, and go with the flow
- Zeckendorfs accused of ‘brazen fraud’ in $80M penthouse sale
- $10M-plus deals in Manhattan hit biggest week since December
More from RegulationsMore posts in Regulations »
- Rep. Eric Swalwell sues Pulte, FHFA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
- Letitia James mortgage fraud case thrown out, but can be refiled
- Pulte’s role in mortgage fraud indictment under scrutiny
- Don’t merge Fannie and Freddie, says their biggest investor
- Fallout over Fed policymakers’ investments reshaping the board
More from SelectMore posts in Select »
- This team is jumping on the private listing platform trend (EXCLUSIVE)
- Redfin on 2026: Affordability improves, sales rise only slightly
- Dual licensing is on the rise. Is it the right move for your business?
- Future-proof your digital footprint for 2026 (and beyond)
- Change strategy as the market shifts to win the listings long game
Be First to Comment