Overall sentiment in the reviews is mixed: residents and observers note clear strengths in affordability and safety, but significant operational and policy concerns surface repeatedly. Positive comments focus on the property being a good place to live, with low, income-based rent and effective security measures. Those elements suggest the site successfully serves low-income seniors who are able to secure units, offering a stable and financially accessible housing option for that population.
A dominant negative theme is the housing mix and its consequences. Multiple reviewers point to an overconcentration of senior housing and an insufficient supply of family units. That imbalance is not presented as a minor annoyance but as a driver of serious harms: reviewers report families becoming homeless and that those families are not receiving help. This pattern indicates either a shortage of family-sized units in the broader housing stock associated with the property or placement/prioritization policies that favor seniors over families. The reviews explicitly state that no assistance was offered to displaced families, which elevates this concern from an operational quibble to a potential social-services and access issue.
Staff responsiveness and management communication are another clear pain point. Reviewers describe staff as unresponsive, noting unanswered phone calls and a lack of callbacks. These symptoms point to customer service or staffing shortcomings and undermine confidence in the management's ability to address urgent resident needs — particularly important given the reported instances of families facing homelessness. The reviews do not provide details about in-person staff behavior or administrative processes beyond phone responsiveness, but the telephone communication failures are consistent and consequential in the accounts provided.
The reviews provide limited direct information about care quality, facilities beyond security, dining, or activities. Security is repeatedly cited as a positive feature, but there are no specific mentions of on-site programming, dining options, maintenance responsiveness, or the physical condition of buildings. Given the strengths around affordability and safety, it is possible that other facility functions are adequate, but the absence of commentary means those areas remain uncertain and merit further inquiry for a complete assessment.
In summary, Lebanon Square Apartments appears to serve its intended low-income senior population well in terms of affordability and safety, but there are serious concerns about housing allocation and management responsiveness. The most pressing patterns in the reviews are (1) a perceived overemphasis on senior-only housing that contributes to a lack of family housing, (2) reports that families have been left homeless without assistance, and (3) consistent complaints about unresponsive staff and unanswered phone calls. These issues suggest that prospective residents, advocates, or oversight bodies should investigate unit mix policies and staffing/communication practices to ensure vulnerable families are not being excluded and that resident needs are being handled appropriately.







