Wednesday, March 18, 2026

What it’s like living among 2 fraternities in 1 East Village building

Interview by Stacie Joy 

We're fortunate to receive a steady stream of compelling photos and videos from tipsters around the neighborhood.

This one — from a resident on Fourth Street between Avenue C and Avenue D — stood out. 

The resident says they've been kept awake by ongoing late-night activity, including rooftop parties and what they describe as frat-style hazing rituals in the backyard, and wanted to document what they've been experiencing. 

Thanks for sending the images (and video) along! What are we looking at in these photos? 

These were photos from various nights. The main one appeared to be a hazing ritual with the fraternity in the basement.
You said there is more than one fraternity in your building. Can you tell me when they moved in, which fraternities they are members of, and which schools they attend?

The frats all seemed to move in over the summer last year. The ones in the basement appear to be NYU (from their gear and what they yell), and according to their beer pong table, they're Kappa Sigma. The ones upstairs also seem to be from NYU, according to what partygoers have yelled in the hallways. 

What has it been like living there?

As I'm typing this, the frat upstairs is running through the halls, yelling, and banging on walls and doors.

There will be normal times here and there, where maybe they're out of town, but even now, during spring break, there's a lot of activity. The frat upstairs hosts frequent parties where their guests leave trash all over the halls and outside — mainly the ubiquitous red Solo cups and beer bottles/cans. 

The frat in the basement seems to be more respectful; they generally move inside by 10 p.m. and haven't been as destructive overall. 

Other neighbors in the building and the neighborhood at large have complained about them having hazing-type rituals out on Fourth Street, where they are yelling until all hours. 

On more than one night, I've received late-night texts from neighbors asking if I can do anything about the rooftop parties. This is just as likely to happen during the week as on weekends, which has really caused problems for those of us who have weekday jobs. 

The noise and banging are so significant that all of the pictures on my wall move from the vibrations. The cops and 311 have been called repeatedly; supposedly, they've found nothing. 

The guys upstairs haven't been friendly about keeping noise down or being good neighbors, but the ones in the basement are at least open to discussion and have made obvious efforts to keep the noise down overnight.
How are the two frats different from each other? 

The ones in the basement are both more respectful and more outrageous. That's probably just because we can all see what they're doing, whereas the other frats have their activities in their apartments or on the roof. The tied-up, half-naked nights in the garden are at least entertaining! 

Do you have any interaction with them? How are they as neighbors? What do other tenants in the building say? 

I've spoken to all of them. The basement one seems to try to be a good neighbor, at least more than the others. I've seen them cleaning the hall trash, holding open doors, and being polite, and where there's a complaint, they seem to try to tone it down. 

The upstairs groups, in contrast, are entitled, rude, and seem to have zero interest in anyone's well-being but their own. I think the takeaway is that it's upsettingly stereotypical that people coming into the neighborhood seem to have very little concern for being part of it or for the people around them. 

The majority of them don't appear to work or pay for anything themselves (overheard hallway yelling about "daddy paying"), and I can't help but think that they see themselves as having zero accountability since they have zero skin in the game.

The building was previously a mix of families and working people; we all basically kept to ourselves, but were a friendly group. Since the building was sold a few years ago, the rents have increased dramatically, and the quality of life has dropped to rock bottom. 

You mentioned having some issues with noise and parties. What steps, if any, has your landlord or management taken to address them? 

The landlord sent out one group email about the noise. Other than the one letter, I'm unaware of anything being done, and they generally ignore complaints. 

What is their musical taste like? 

Basic.

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What about beverage choices? 

Equally basic. The light beers, red Solo cups and White Claws are on full display. 

Can you speak a bit about the hazing rituals you have witnessed? Assuming that is what we see in some of these photos. 

The ones that I have seen seem to be rooted around, I guess, good-natured humiliation? They're usually centered on some sort of nakedness, regardless of the weather, and on subservience. 

Since it seems consensual and not dangerous, I personally don't have an issue with that part, outside the noise.

41 comments:

  1. This reader has the patience and good humor of a saint. One course of action they (or other building neighbors) could take is to notify the fraternity organization. I remember people I knew in frats would be super serious about their chapter, so if you sent an email to Kappa Sigma leadership they have a rogue group that is breaking the law (and getting bad press!) they could put pressure on them. Sounds like these bros don't listen to police or neighbors, so that might be an authority they do respond to. Unfortunately that sounds like it would only handle the downstairs frat. As for the upstairs...oomph. I hate that the landlord doesn't give a damn.

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    1. Contacting the fraternity is a great idea.

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  2. I think I would have to move. That would be really untenable for me. I’m feel sorry for the people that live in that building. I think NYU should invest in a floating dorm and park it on the East River. Party boat!

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    1. Ever heard of eggs and some certain liquid bombs?

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  3. This is good reporting!

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  4. What a nightmare. I looked at NYU’s website and they have a bunch of info on fraternities, including an “Incident Report Form” and links to the inter-fraternity councils. You’d need to find out who the upstairs people are, which might even be on their door. Interestingly, the NYU website lists nine fraternities that have been temporarily or permanently suspended for bad behavior. It also seems that housing a fraternity in an apartment building might be a code violation, so I would take it up with our City Council member and/or the Community Board office to see if that avenue is worth pursuing. Finally, since the downstairs group whose name you know seem to be trying to be good neighbors, I would focus on the upstairs one first. But I’m not living through this. Good luck!

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    1. Adding on — I just read about the fatal fire in Queens in a building where apartments had been illegally subdivided, which contributed to the bad outcome. If the landlord has allowed alterations without a permit (just speculating here) that could be another reason for a building inspection.

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  5. Could be worse. Used to be extremely dangerous when I grew up there. Vampires shooting up; robberies, gangs, etc…

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    1. I used to think this would be my worst neighbor situation till the "autistic" woman into my building. She's a grifter scamming the system. Comes from an incredibly wealthy family. Has scary, convicted-felon boyfriends. The apartment is a hoarder's haven. They can't get her out because she's "disabled".
      I'll take the frat boys.
      P.S. I am not making light of those who are truly mentally ill. I do have an issue with people who take advantage of the system.

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    2. I never understand the "could be worse" mentality in these situation...It could be better and it should be better!
      If we had a system that works, like checking out when issues/complaints are reported especially when it is numerous issues from multiple people. I have lived here since 1990 and have seen and heard it all...Bad is bad and our living spaces shouldn't be invaded by others lack of respect. For what its worth I have back yard party kids, not yet to the level reported on EV but a drag non the less. I confronted them, believe it or not during the Freezing weather around 12:30am and they grumbled some garbage but shut it down. Warm weather is coming up so we will see~

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  6. Read your lease. This behavior is a violation of your lease on the part of the landlord. You can withhold rent until the tenants creating this situation are controlled. Better yet, organize your fellow tenants. Including the market rate renters! It’s amazing how a sudden drop in income will inspire landlords into action. Happened in my building, the loud, illegal parties on our roof and backyard stopped and the landlord is now screening new tenants very carefully. He’s still making tons of market rate money but now the building is quiet.

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  7. This reminds me of how life in my building deteriorated when Swift Hibernian opened on our ground floor.

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    1. That was over 20 years ago, right? I remembered that place as cool and not fraty at all. Loved it there in its first years.

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  8. These kind of people make life miserable for surrounding neighbors. Myself and fellow neighbors have gone through similar noise situations with two buildings on Avenue A. Building owners who don't live onsite say they ask in their leases for tenants to be respectful of neighbors but this does nothing when you get frat types moving in. We have been working with the 9th Precinct for the last few years and they've been a big help, but with each new batch of college age tenants it's back to square one.

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  9. Buncha drunken kinksters into humiliation rituals. They will fit right in if they can only be persuaded to dress better.

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  10. sounds kinda hot. lol. join in on the fun and teach them a thing or two.

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  11. Go to the 9th Precinct monthly meeting. Next one is on April 21st at 7:00 PM. This is an on-going issue with NYU fraternities and the Community Affairs Officers a have a good relationship with NYU regarding this issue. And it doesn't hurt to reach out to our new assembly rep Harvey Epstein and Susan Stetzer in Community. Board 3. In addition call 311 (and tell your neighbors) EVERY TIME there is extreme noise. Depending on what's going on in the neighborhood they will send a squad car but most importantly the 311 calls are reviewed by the precinct commanding officer. Squeaky wheels get the oil .Make some of your own noise.

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  12. Dump water on these cockroaches. Also, they scare easy cause they are not from here or a part of the neighborhood so just give em a little talking to, even a scary note works on these little monsters.

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    1. Dump water! Great idea

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    2. If you have a cat box, that works better; in warmer months, partygoers welcome having water dumped on them.

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    3. Why just water?

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  13. Bloody hell. This type of nuisance would drive me mad on a daily basis. Unless something can be done, I'd consider relocating to another building in the neighbourhood. Or, I'd find a clever way of making all of them miserable without breaking the law of course. It's truly alarming how many of these entitled wankers lack self and social awareness. As a father myself, if I discovered one of my sons did something like this, I'd threaten to cut them off financially, and let them figure out how to be an adult.

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  14. O.M.G. Horrible. Withhold rent per comment above. Unacceptable.

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  15. I wish this was in my building. Some good clean fun.
    All I got is geriatrics that complain all day.

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  16. Schools supposedly have a very strict no hazing policy. Contact NYU as well. The topless stress position photo alone should be enough to suspend that organization. I mean, it SHOULD be enough, but who the hell knows what happens these days. Anyway there should be consequences.

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    1. Show any evidence photos you have to the 9th precinct; as Xeo says, it "should" be enough—but who knows.

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  17. Fuck to the NO. I moonlighted as a private investigator during the aughts to afford graduate school at Columbia. It was such a great way to earn good money while developing a certain skillset. There are numerous avenues to explore as to who these little shits are, where they are from, if they have jobs, and who their parents are. It requires a bit of work, but ask around. Find out their names, follow them perhaps, befriend them, etc. They need to know this isn't a college campus. People have lives and families and seek peace and solace when arriving home. I liked the idea from another commenter about throwing water on them. I'd invest in a big box of balloons if I lived over this madness.

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    1. Yes, a big box of balloons and make them into water balloons. Let’s see how they like being inconvenienced AND wet ☔️

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  18. Great reporting as always, by Stacie! Just when I think I miss my old hood this pops up! I had beef with Coyote Ugly when it was on 1st + 9th - their backyard (where the dumpsters were and where the girls would smoke) was DIRECTLY under my bedroom window. I made friends with the community board. They came over and measured the decible levels. I called the cops so much I got one of the detective's private cell. It was a different time but hopefully Communtiy board 3 will help out! Sounds like a f-ing nightmare.

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  19. Take photos with your phone of any and all bad tenant behavior and send a concise email to the landlord with dates/times, photos of clear problems and clearly identified responsible parties. If the tenant is having organized gatherings in an apartment/roof and someone falls off the roof or gets hurt that is a liability to the landlord and it would potentially not be covered, or at least be a costly claim on the building’s liability insurance.

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  20. File a complaint with the Dean of Students at NYU. This is a student conduct issue (on or off campus!). Hazing is a serious infraction and can result in dismissal from NYU per the federal Stop Campus Hazing Act (SCHA). Call 212.998.4311 or email this article along with the photos to student.conduct@nyu.edu.

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  21. This is not an isolated problem unfortunately. I was also a victim of a fraternity that took over one of the buildings on 6th Street for many years. The anxiety and anger I carried for three years was immense, I eventually had to move out.
    I documented everything: I had over 100 videos as evidence of the ongoing disturbances. By the time I left, the building had accumulated 80+ noise complaints through 311 for a mere 3months of time, and nothing was ever done.
    What made it worse was watching the normal renters slowly give up and leave, only to have their vacant apartments filled with more people from the same frat. The building management and super were a nightmare — they actually revealed my name and apartment number to the fraternity after I complained. The guys came up to "apologize," then partied all night.
    The only peace I ever got was during winter break in January. Otherwise, it was random shouting, loud music, full-on parties, and at one point they had a DJ set up in the backyard. I never slept well of felt calm the entire time I lived there. They knew my face, and I genuinely did not feel safe.
    Every time I complained, nothing changed. At one point they told me to just move out and claiming I was the only one complaining, which wasn't true..... I'm glad I finally left, though I loved my apartment. It's infuriating that they feel entitled to destroy other people's peace and just... get away with it.

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    1. Wow. I would have had a nervous breakdown within a week. I lived on 4th st and 1st ave for 27 years and had my share of inconsiderate neighbors-but NOTHING like these fraternity stories.

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  22. This is not an isolated problem unfortunately. I was also a victim of a fraternity that took over one of the buildings on 6th Street for many years. The anxiety and anger I carried for three years was immense, I eventually had to move out because of this.
    I documented everything: I had over 100 videos as evidence of the ongoing disturbances. By the time I left, the building had accumulated 80+ noise complaints through 311 in a year, and nothing was ever done.
    What made it worse was watching the normal renters slowly give up and leave, only to have their vacant apartments filled with more people from the same frat. The building management and super were a nightmare, they actually revealed my name and apartment number to the fraternity after I complained. The guys came up to "apologize," then partied all night.
    The only peace I ever got was during winter break in January. Otherwise, it was random shouting, loud music, full-on parties, and at one point they had a DJ set up in the backyard. I never slept well the entire time I lived there. They knew my face, and I genuinely did not feel safe.
    Every time I complained, nothing changed. At one point they told me to just move out and claimed I was the only one complaining, which I knew wasn't true. I'm glad I finally left. It's infuriating that they feel entitled to destroy other people's peace and just... get away with it.

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  23. FERMENTED PISS WORKS WONDERS

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  24. Where is this place? There's NYU between C & D?

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  25. It hurts to read this. I very successfully worked with Carlina Rivera’s office for a few years to eventually shut down two NYU student neighborhood party roofs. The police were of absolutely no help at all. Rivera’s work led to an August 2025 City new legislation regarding 311 and receiving reports of rooftop activities. For unrelated reasons, I recently moved out of the neighborhood and while I loved my 40+ years living downtown, I pinch myself with how I enjoy the calm and respect of my new neighborhood and I can hop on the subway anytime I want the downtown scene. If I can make this change in neighborhood activity, you can too. Band together and work with your Councilperson. They serve at the pleasure of the constituents. Don’t let them off the hook. You and your neighbors can make the change. I believe in you.

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  26. I live near Joyface on 7th and C. Every weekend feels like a college fraternity has taken our block over with no regard for the citizens who pay a lot of money to live here. Absolutely dread Fri and Sat nights. I can't imagine every day dealing with this lunacy. These tenants mentioned in this post have every reason to be outraged. Those images remind me of the horrifying film, GOAT, which is about hazing in a fraternity. Whomever is renting in that building with the backyard have biding leases forbidding such activities. I'd find a community based lawyer who does pro bono to put an end to that BS.

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  27. As of this moment, they're on DOUBLE SECRET PROBATION!

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