Jackson Heights sits in the northwestern corner of Queens, occupying a stretch of the borough where dozens of languages can be heard on a single city block. What began as a marshy colonial-era lowland called Trains Meadow has grown into one of the most culturally layered neighborhoods in New York City, a designation the New York Times has echoed more than once. The neighborhood draws energy from its main commercial corridors along Roosevelt Avenue and 74th Street, where South Asian grocery stores, Latin American bakeries, and Himalayan eateries share the streetscape with longtime community institutions.
The housing stock here leans heavily toward pre-war co-ops and mid-rise brick apartment communities, many of which feature interior courtyards that give the neighborhood a surprisingly green, almost European quality. Garden apartments and attached row homes also appear throughout the residential blocks, offering renters a range of footprints and price points within a walkable setting.