Don't buy
before you
read this.
THE DATA NEW YORK REFUSES TO PUBLISH
In New York, a barber needs a state license.
The person managing a $200 million residential building
needs absolutely nothing.
CONDOSCOOPSNY
We reverse-engineered the registry New York refuses to maintain.
Using nothing but free public data — NYC Open Data, HPD Registrations, NYSCEF court records — we identified 4,177 residential buildings across 23 managing agent firms. Every claim links to a primary source. Every number is reproducible.
BY THE NUMBERS
CASE STUDY
Same city. Same laws.
Different outcomes.
The Pritzker Tower
Herzog & de Meuron. 60 stories. All-glass curtain wall. Anish Kapoor sculpture in the lobby. Median unit: $4.3 million.
The AKAM Building
Conventional masonry. Same year converted. Same regulatory cycles. Same city. Median unit: $455,000. AKAM-managed.
The Easy Facade Is Failing
Glazed curtain wall systems are engineered to perform for 20–30 years. Failures within 2 years indicate installation defects — clear liability. The Pritzker Tower’s all-glass facade has zero violations. The masonry building next door has thirteen. The complexity defense is dead.
The Langston Is the Median
Rank #169 of 361 in AKAM's own portfolio. Not an outlier. Not cherry-picked. 168 AKAM buildings have worse public records.
The Neighbor
Same block as the Langston. Same year built. Same ZIP code. Also AKAM-managed. Three Class C immediately hazardous violations and half a million in facade fines.
21-05 33rd Street
Acropolis Associates LLC. 617 units, built 1923. The #1 worst AKAM building. 1,350 immediately hazardous HPD violations. 1,054 water complaints. 12 active NYSCEF lawsuits.
Kips Bay Towers
333 East 30th Street. 1,118 units. Designed by I.M. Pei. AKAM-managed. $1.53 million in unpaid LL11 facade fines — the single largest penalty in the portfolio.
Hillman Houses
550 Grand Street. 525 units. Built 1949 by garment workers' unions. HPD violations going back to 1980 — 46 years of continuous habitability failures under professional management.
$7.6 Million in Fines
Across just the 25 worst AKAM buildings: 3,150 immediately hazardous violations. 289 active Supreme Court lawsuits. 569 new HPD citations in the last 12 months alone. All under one unlicensed firm.
"NYC has the rules. NYC has the inspectors.
What it doesn't have is anyone whose job it is to
make sure the rules apply equally to both buildings."
THE REGULATORY GAP
Everyone is licensed.
Except the one that matters.
Florida fixed this in 1987. California, Nevada, Illinois, Virginia, Georgia, and Connecticut followed. New York — with more condos and co-ops than any state — has not.
EXPLORE
Go deeper.
The Registry Gap
No public managing agent registry. We reverse-engineered one from open data — 4,177 buildings across 23 firms.
Read the investigation →AKAM Associates
542 buildings. $7.6M in unpaid fines. 289 active lawsuits. 1,350 immediately hazardous violations in one building alone.
See the leaderboard →
81 Issues
Every regulatory gap, scam pattern, and governance defect in NYC housing — documented with primary sources and comparison jurisdictions.
Browse all issues →Methodology
Every score is reproducible. Every claim is one URL from its primary source. Audit us.
See the methodology →