article · ~5 min · live data

Who owns this building?

Twelve buildings — out of hundreds of thousands citywide — generated more than 20 Class C housing violations apiece since 2024. Class C means immediately hazardous: lead paint, no heat, no hot water, vermin infestations. Behind these buildings, almost always, is a handful of beneficial owners hidden behind dozens of LLCs.

HPD classifies maintenance code violations into three severity classes. Class A is non-hazardous — peeling paint, missing window guards, stuff that's bad but not dangerous. Class B is hazardous — broken locks, defective plaster, things that can cause harm. Class C is the one that matters for our purposes: immediately hazardous. Lead paint. No heat in January. No hot water. Mice and roach infestations severe enough to constitute a public-health emergency. Fire egress problems. The kind of conditions that kill people.

The citywide breakdown since 2024 looks like this:

0 Class C violations citywide in roughly two years. That number sounds abstract until you concentrate it. The dozen worst buildings — each one with more than 20 Class C violations issued in the same period — look like this:

A building with 30+ Class C violations in two years is not having a bad month. It is being run in a way that is institutionally hostile to its tenants. The interesting question is: who's running it?

The corporate-veil problem

The named owner on each violation is, almost always, an LLC. The LLC was formed for the purpose of owning this one building. Its registered agent is a law firm. Its mailing address is a P.O. box. Its directors, on paper, are nominees. The actual beneficial owner — the person who collects the rents, who decides whether to make the repairs, who profits from running the building this way — is one corporate layer removed from anything you can find in the open data.

But the beneficial owner is findable. Tools like JustFix.nyc's Who Owns What, the Anti-Eviction Mapping Project, and the Right to Counsel Eviction Crisis Monitor do the join. They take this dataset (the violations themselves), the city's mailing-address registries (where the registered-agent and management-company addresses live), and the ACRIS deed records (which document the beneficial owner at the moment of property transfer), and they correlate. The same beneficial owner shows up behind dozens — sometimes hundreds — of LLCs. The same five attorneys keep filing for the same five property-management companies. The same handful of names keep appearing in the chain of title.

This is the corporate-veil-piercing pattern that tenant-advocacy work depends on. It is also the reason the city's open-data policy includes the violation data in the first place. The LLCs are obscuring; the violations are not. By making the violations queryable, joinable, and public, the city makes the obscuring strategy less viable.

The network, rendered

tap any LLC or officer to keep walking the network — the next two layers around your click are already cached · methodology re-implemented from JustFix NYC's Who Owns What

initial view: registered owners + officers for each of 20 seed BBLs · click any node to expand

Beneficial-owner network behind the worst buildings

building llc officer Shared address Shared agent Shared officer
FromToShared
BRUCKNER BYTHE BRIDGE, LLC331 EAST 132 STREET
CONCORD MANAGEMENT OF NY LLC331 EAST 132 STREET
ASDEN MANAGEMENT LLC1777 GRAND CONCOURSE
1777 GC LLC1777 GRAND CONCOURSE
2342 RYERS HOLDINGS LLC2342 RYER AVENUE
35-64 84TH STREET, LLC35-64 84 STREET
711 seagirt avenue holdings, LLC7-11 SEAGIRT AVENUE
CONCOURSE PLAZA REDEVELOPMENT CO900 GRAND CONCOURSE
MID BX HOUSING MGMT900 GRAND CONCOURSE
172ND STREET REALTY LLC1742 EAST 172 STREET
2732 BAINBRIDGE ASSOC, LLC2732 BAINBRIDGE AVENUE
ARIEL E BELEN AS RECEIVER FOR BRONX 12351235 MORRIS AVENUE
EK REALTY, LLC1235 MORRIS AVENUE
2856 WEBB AVENUE LLC2856 WEBB AVENUE
2856 WEBB AVE LLC.2856 WEBB AVENUE
NEIGHBORHOOD RESTORE2201 DAVIDSON AVENUE
LEMLE & WOLFF, INC2201 DAVIDSON AVENUE
EAST BURNSIDE AVE ASSOC LP270 EAST BURNSIDE AVENUE
KNICKERBOCKER C/O WAVECREST MANAGEMENT GROUP270 EAST BURNSIDE AVENUE
2510 Tratman Realty LLC2510 TRATMAN AVENUE
PROGRESSIVE MANAGEMENT OF NY185 PARK HILL AVENUE
St. George Plaza Owner LLC185 PARK HILL AVENUE
Park Hill Housing Development Fund Corporation140 PARK HILL AVENUE
PROGRESSIVE MANAGEMENT OF NY140 PARK HILL AVENUE
CAM Property MGMT530 EAST 169 STREET
Fordham Fulton Realty Corp530 EAST 169 STREET
DOLPHIN PROPERTY SERVICES, LLC1131 OGDEN AVENUE
Highbridge Preservation LLC1131 OGDEN AVENUE
CAM Property MGMT2410 WASHINGTON AVENUE
Fordham Fulton Realty Corp2410 WASHINGTON AVENUE
ILSOO KIMPROGRESSIVE MANAGEMENT OF NYofficer
RICK GROPPERDOLPHIN PROPERTY SERVICES, LLCofficer
ELI BLEEMANASDEN MANAGEMENT LLCofficer
PETER FINEBRUCKNER BYTHE BRIDGE, LLCofficer
PETER FINECONCORD MANAGEMENT OF NY LLCofficer
ELI BLEEMAN1777 GC LLCofficer
SALVATORE DAVOLANEIGHBORHOOD RESTOREofficer
BENITO MOFENO2342 RYERS HOLDINGS LLCofficer
MARGARET BRUNN35-64 84TH STREET, LLCofficer
SeagirtAvenue HoldingLLC711 seagirt avenue holdings, LLCofficer
ARIEL BELENEK REALTY, LLCofficer
JEANETTE PURYEARCONCOURSE PLAZA REDEVELOPMENT COofficer
JEANETTE PURYEARMID BX HOUSING MGMTofficer
MOSHE PILLER172ND STREET REALTY LLCofficer
ExemptTrSpouse UWILLJGERSHENOV2732 BAINBRIDGE ASSOC, LLCofficer
ARIEL BELENARIEL E BELEN AS RECEIVER FOR BRONX 1235officer
ZEF VATAJ2856 WEBB AVENUE LLCofficer
ZEF VATAJ2856 WEBB AVE LLC.officer
SALVATORE DAVOLALEMLE & WOLFF, INCofficer
SALVATORE DAVOLACONCORD MANAGEMENT OF NY LLCofficer
PETER FINEEAST BURNSIDE AVE ASSOC LPofficer
PETER FINEKNICKERBOCKER C/O WAVECREST MANAGEMENT GROUPofficer
Ian LagowitzCAM Property MGMTofficer
Eduart Shllaku2510 Tratman Realty LLCofficer
ILSOO KIMSt. George Plaza Owner LLCofficer
ILSOO KIMPark Hill Housing Development Fund Corporationofficer
Ian LagowitzFordham Fulton Realty Corpofficer
RICK GROPPERHighbridge Preservation LLCofficer
DOLPHIN PROPERTY SERVICES, LLCHighbridge Preservation LLCaddress

What the data does not say

The dataset is conditions data, not causes data. A building with 30 Class C violations might have a negligent owner; it might have a building-systems problem that predates the current ownership; it might have tenants organized enough to file every violation they encounter. Volume of violations is jointly a function of physical conditions, owner responsiveness, and tenant civic capacity. Two buildings in similar physical states will accumulate very different violation counts depending on whether their tenants know to call HPD.

This is a feature, not a bug, when you remember what the dataset is for. The point isn't to identify the buildings with the worst conditions. The point is to identify the buildings the system is actually responding to. The Class C violation count is a measure of public action being taken against private negligence. When we list the worst buildings by Class C count, we're listing the buildings where tenants pushed back hard enough that the city pushed back too. Combined with the corporate-veil-piercing tools above, the data starts to name names.

Data sources