Through the Alternative Enforcement Program, the city will increase monitoring and make repairs when landlords fail to act
TODAY, New York City Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani and Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) Commissioner Dina Levy released an updated list of the 250 buildings with the most severe housing code violations citywide, placing them under heightened oversight through the Alternative Enforcement Program (AEP).
AEP, now in its 19th year, allows the city to closely monitor repeat offenders, conduct more frequent inspections, issue Orders to Correct and step in directly to make repairs when owners fail to do so, billing landlords for the cost. The 250 buildings selected this year account for nearly 55,000 open violations and owe the city nearly $4.5 million for emergency repairs already performed.
The updated AEP list builds on the Mamdani administration’s commitment to ensuring every New Yorker has a safe, stable, and well-maintained home. Last month, HPD announced a $2.1 million settlement with A&E Real Estate Holdings covering 14 buildings – the largest ever won by HPD’s Anti-Harassment Unit – requiring extensive repairs, compliance with Orders to Correct and injunctions barring tenant harassment.
During the ongoing cold emergency, HPD has also treated this winter conditions as an all-hands-on-deck effort, maximizing staffing to respond to approximately 37,000 complaints in January and closing 98% of them as of Feb. 4.
“In our first month in office, we’ve been clear: New York will no longer look the other way while bad landlords put tenants at risk. The Alternative Enforcement Program gives us the power to closely monitor repeat offenders and step in to fix conditions when landlords refuse to do their jobs,” said Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani. “We’ll use every tool we have to protect New Yorkers’ homes and make safe, dignified housing non-negotiable.”
“With this update to the Alternative Enforcement Program, we will be able to take decisive action to ensure that repairs are made in the buildings where they are most needed. I’m grateful to the HPD team for their ongoing work to protect tenants and ensure homes are safe and livable,” said Leila Bozorg, Deputy Mayor for Housing and Planning.
“Every New Yorker deserves a safe and well-maintained place to rest, raise their family, and sleep at night. The updated AEP round is an important milestone as the city stands shoulder to shoulder with tenants to deliver high quality, affordable homes,” said Cea Weaver, Director of the Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants.
“This administration will not back away from protecting tenants or enforcing the Housing Maintenance Code. Today, we are naming the 250 buildings entering HPD’s Alternative Enforcement Program. When landlords refuse to do their job, the city will intervene, advances critical repairs, and recover costs from owners,” said Housing Preservation and Development Commissioner Dina Levy. “We want to make it abundantly clear: landlords who repeatedly fail their tenants will be held accountable.”
The 250 buildings selected for this year’s AEP list include 7,038 homes and account for 54,909 open housing code violations, reflecting widespread and persistent disrepair. The building with the most open “B” and “C” violations issued over the past five years – more than 1,000 of the most serious violations – is 34-15 Parsons Blvd., registered to an LLC within the A&E Real Estate Holdings portfolio.
Building owners on this year’s AEP round owe the city nearly $4.5 million for failing to correct critical violations, triggering emergency interventions by HPD. Additionally, HPD’s Housing Litigation Division is a party to action against the owners of 138 buildings in housing court to force compliance.
About the Alternative Enforcement Program (AEP)
The AEP program targets buildings with serious, unresolved violations that indicate landlords are failing to maintain basic living conditions. Each year, HPD designates a new round of buildings for AEP based on excessive housing code violations which directly impact tenants’ well-being, and landlords are required to repay the city for any emergency repairs HPD completes. Building owners can be discharged from AEP within months if they quickly resolve violations and settle outstanding emergency repair charges or enter a payment agreement with the City. If an owner fails to comply, HPD may escalate enforcement by taking legal action in Housing Court. HPD monitors buildings discharged from AEP for at least one year to ensure conditions remain stable, and re-selection for future AEP rounds can trigger immediate enforcement measures.



