Neighborhood Risk Rankings · Queens / Flushing
Flushing.
94 buildings ranked by open violation count. Browse the rankings, then audit any address to see what a listing won't tell you.
Highest count
479.
Worst single building in Flushing.
Buildings ranked
94
From NYC PLUTO seed
Visible risk signals
11,393
DOB + HPD combined
Median signal count
100
Per building, mid-pack
Highest-signal building
479
Worst single BBL
Flushing is Queens's densest Asian-American neighborhood and one of NYC's fastest-growing residential markets — the downtown core in ZIP 11354 has seen significant 2010s high-rise development along Roosevelt Avenue and Main Street, while surrounding 11355 and 11358 remain dominated by pre-war and post-war 2- to 6-family homes and walk-up apartment stock. The compliance pattern here is distinctive: high illegal-conversion rates in 1-2 family homes (basement units rented without CO sign-off), DOB violations on unpermitted additions, and significant concentration of large multifamily buildings in the downtown core that drive the neighborhood's open-violation totals. The list below ranks Flushing buildings by current open HPD violations.
Ranked by open violations
94 Flushing buildings worth a closer look.
Rankings start with visible maintenance-risk signals. Open any address to review the full audit: violations, permits, filings, fines, flood exposure, and neighborhood context.
Flushing FAQ
Frequently asked about Flushing buildings.
Why are illegal conversions so common in Flushing?
Flushing's 1- to 4-family housing stock attracts conversion pressure from immigrant family households and rental investors. DOB enforcement records show Flushing as one of the city's highest-volume illegal-conversion enforcement zones. The audit checks each BBL's filed CO against the listed unit count; for any listing that emphasizes a 'finished basement' or 'in-law unit,' run the audit before signing.
Which Flushing ZIP has the most building violations?
ZIP 11355 (south and east of downtown Flushing, toward Kew Gardens Hills and Murray Hill) tends to carry the highest per-building open-violation counts in our index, driven by older walk-up apartment stock. 11354 (downtown core) carries the largest absolute totals because of high-rise scale, but per-unit rates are lower. 11358 (Auburndale / Bayside edge) trends lowest.
Are downtown Flushing high-rises rent-stabilized?
Some are — newer towers built under 421-a or other tax abatement programs typically carry stabilization for the abatement term. Older pre-1974 buildings in the core qualify under standard 6+ unit rules. The audit's DHCR check shows the specific building's status; for any newer high-rise lease, ask the landlord directly about the 421-a expiration year if applicable.
Is downtown Flushing in a FEMA flood zone?
Parts of northern 11354 toward Flushing Bay and Willets Point sit in FEMA Zones AE and X. Most of the inland downtown core and the surrounding residential ZIPs are outside high-risk zones. The audit pulls FEMA designation per BBL; for any property near Flushing Creek or the bay, this is worth checking before signing.
How do I check if a Flushing 2-family home is legal?
Pull the Certificate of Occupancy via the audit — it shows the building's filed unit count. A 'two-family' listing with a CO for one family unit is an illegal conversion; the basement or attic unit can be vacated by DOB. Many Flushing 1- and 2-family homes have unpermitted additions that don't appear on the CO; the audit's DOB permit history catches most of these.
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