The Lower East Side condo owner who cut his apartment in half horizontally to rent bizarre pint-sized units to 11 desperate tenants wasn’t the only enterprising landlord in his building.

The city Buildings Department issued 10 violations to Jing Ya Lin, the owner of unit 701 at 165 Henry Street, after a tip from the Post pointing out an oddly similar arrangement of air conditioners in the apartment’s floor-to-ceiling windows.

A Buildings spokesman said Saturday the condo was “set up as an illegal duplex, with similar ceiling heights” to the subunits found Friday in the 634-square-foot unit one floor below.

City records show Jing bought the 643-square-foot condo in September 2015, in an off-market deal. It’s not clear how much he paid for the property, but a mortgage of just $9,622 was recorded.

In the unit revealed Friday, which City Councilman Ben Kallos (D-Manhattan) compared with “7 1/2 floor” in the 1999 fantasy film “Being John Malkovich,” the ceilings were 4 1/2 feet tall, and the owner, Xue Ping Ni, had used bubble wrap to keep residents from hitting their heads on low-hanging pipes.

Seven tenants were seen leaving the building late Friday with their possessions in bags and suitcases. One, who told the Post he and others were ordered to vacate the top floors, said he was paying $600 a month for the minuscule apartment.