建筑风险排行
Staten Island 建筑风险排行
Staten Island is NYC's most suburban borough — single-family detached homes and small multi-units dominate, with notable apartment concentrations in St. George, New Brighton, Port Richmond, and along the North Shore. The compliance profile here looks different than the rest of NYC: most violations involve shoreline flood-zone disclosure (post-Sandy), permitting on home additions, and a small set of large multifamily buildings that drive the borough's open-violation count well out of proportion to their unit share. The list below ranks Staten Island buildings flagged for significant open HPD violations.
上榜建筑
73
可见风险信号
11,860
信号中位数
133
最高信号建筑
866
73 栋值得进一步查看的 Staten Island 建筑
排行从可见的维护风险信号开始。打开任意地址可查看完整审计:违规、许可、申报、罚款、洪水风险和社区环境。
关于 Staten Island 建筑的常见问题
Which Staten Island areas have the most building violations?
Port Richmond, Stapleton, and parts of the North Shore carry Staten Island's highest per-building violation counts — these are also where most of the borough's multifamily apartment stock sits. South Shore neighborhoods (Tottenville, Annadale, Great Kills) are dominated by single-family homes and show very low aggregate violation counts.
How do I check if a Staten Island home is in a FEMA flood zone?
Our audit cross-references the FEMA National Flood Hazard Layer against the property's geocoded location. The report shows the flood zone designation (e.g., Zone AE, Zone X) and base flood elevation if applicable. Staten Island has the largest residential exposure to FEMA flood zones in NYC, especially along the South and East shores — Sandy-era damage records are often relevant for homes sold in those areas.
Are Staten Island single-family homes covered in our audits?
Yes — any BBL with a registered Certificate of Occupancy can be audited. For single-family homes the audit pulls DOB permit history, any open violations, FEMA flood zone, ACRIS sales history, and the neighborhood signals (school grades, NYPD precinct safety, transit access). Single-family Staten Island homes typically have far fewer open violations than apartment buildings.
What's the average violation count for Staten Island apartments?
Staten Island multifamily buildings average lower open-violation counts than comparable buildings in Brooklyn or the Bronx — partly because the borough has fewer large rent-stabilized walk-ups and partly because building density is lower. That said, a handful of larger Staten Island apartment complexes carry significant open-violation histories and appear at the top of our list below.
Should I worry about Sandy-era damage records on Staten Island?
If you're buying or renting in a coastal Staten Island neighborhood (South Shore, East Shore, parts of the North Shore), Sandy-era damage and rebuild records are worth checking. Our audit pulls DOB post-Sandy permit filings and FEMA flood-zone designation. A property in FEMA Zone AE with no record of post-Sandy elevation or flood-proofing work is a flag worth understanding before signing.