Yes, but it's not always appropriate.
This is an example of very informal, spoken English - it's a lazy, unpretentious way of talking. While it's fine to say "kind of noisy" in casual and neutral conversation, you wouldn't use it in a formal context.
In written English, you might use it in an informal message, but not elsewhere. For example, if a friend says "What's the hotel like?" and you answer "It's kind of noisy",, that's OK. But if you are writing a letter of complaint to a hotel or an article reviewing a washing machine, you would not use this phrasing - you would be expected to use a more standard, less colloquial, modifier.
These all mean generally the same thing:
It's kind of noisy.
It's a little noisy.
It's a bit noisy.
It's somewhat noisy. (sounds formal)
It's slightly noisy. (sounds formal)
If there is a lot of noise, you could say:
It's really noisy.
It's very noisy.
It's extremely noisy. (sounds formal. It is also stronger than very and really.)
It's noisy as f$#%. (offensive, sounds uncultured to many people)