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Jackson Heights

Jackson Heights, New York

Photo: Jleon · CC BY 2.5

Jackson Heights began around 1914 as one of America's first planned "garden city" communities, laid out by the Queensboro Corporation. Now a New York City Historic District, it holds a rare collection of pre-war garden-apartment co-ops — brick and stucco buildings set around private courtyards, with complexes such as Linden Court, The Chateau, and Hampton Court. The housing stock is overwhelmingly cooperative, with some condos and attached "garden homes" from the 1920s onward, and pre-war one-bedrooms generally trade well below comparable Manhattan units.

Transit is the neighborhood's anchor. The Jackson Heights–Roosevelt Avenue / 74th Street complex brings five lines together: the 7 (IRT Flushing), plus the E, F, R, and weekday M (IND Queens Boulevard). The 7 runs direct to Grand Central and Times Square in about 20 minutes. Nearby Woodside station, on the LIRR Port Washington Branch, reaches Penn Station and Grand Central Madison in roughly 15 minutes without changing at Jamaica.

Open space and commerce define daily life. Travers Park, along 34th Avenue between 77th and 78th Streets, hosts a year-round Sunday greenmarket, while the 34th Avenue Open Street — co-named "Paseo Park," at roughly 1.3 miles the city's largest — runs a car-free corridor through the district. The commercial streets are a global pantry, from the Himalayan momo and Colombian arepas of Roosevelt Avenue to the South Asian groceries and restaurants of the 74th Street corridor. The neighborhood sits in New York City Geographic District 30, with schools such as P.S. 69 Jackson Heights and I.S. 145 Joseph Pulitzer.

At a glance

Getting around
The Jackson Heights–Roosevelt Avenue / 74th Street complex serves five subway lines — the 7, E, F, R, and weekday M. The 7 reaches Grand Central and Times Square in about 20 minutes. Nearby Woodside station, on the LIRR Port Washington Branch, runs to Penn Station and Grand Central Madison in roughly 15 minutes without a transfer at Jamaica.
Schools
Jackson Heights sits in New York City Geographic District 30. Area public schools include P.S. 69 Jackson Heights, I.S. 145 Joseph Pulitzer, and P.S. 212.
Character
A landmarked historic district of 1910s–20s garden-apartment co-ops set around private courtyards — including Linden Court, The Chateau, and Hampton Court — paired with global food and shopping corridors and the car-free Paseo Park open street. Housing is predominantly co-op, with some condos and garden homes.
Best for
Buyers seeking an accessible NYC co-op entry point with pre-war character and a fast, multi-line commute to Midtown, plus value-focused investors drawn to a dense, transit-rich neighborhood with deep food and retail corridors.