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FirstService Residential

The largest managing agent in New York City — unlicensed in New York State

1,122 buildings. 5,610 Class C violations. No state license. No disciplinary body.

1,122 buildings managed
5,610 Class C violations
(immediately hazardous)
343 buildings with
Class C violations
5.0 violations
per building

PORTFOLIO GEOGRAPHY

1,122 buildings across all five boroughs.

FirstService Residential is the largest managing agent in New York City by building count. Their portfolio was identified through analysis of publicly available NYC housing registration records. The firm self-identifies in its registration filings, making portfolio mapping straightforward.

560 Queens
408 Manhattan
124 Brooklyn
29 Bronx
1 Staten Island

THE PATTERN

Habitability cliff.

FirstService's distinguishing pattern is what we call a habitability cliff: the firm's worst buildings accumulate massive numbers of Class C violations — conditions that HPD classifies as immediately hazardous to life and health — while maintaining relatively low LL11 facade penalty exposure compared to firms like AKAM.

Where AKAM's failure mode is financial (letting deadlines expire and absorbing penalties), FirstService's failure mode is operational: the buildings with the worst conditions are the ones where day-to-day habitability has degraded. Heat failures, water infiltration, pest infestations, lead paint hazards, mold — these are the violations that make a building unsafe to live in, not unsafe to walk past.

The top 25 FirstService buildings alone account for over 2,500 Class C violations. These are not paperwork failures. These are homes where residents are living with conditions the city classifies as immediately dangerous.

COMPARED

Two firms. Two ways of failing.

FirstService and AKAM — the two largest firms we've scored — show fundamentally different failure patterns. Neither is better. Both are unregulated.

FirstService top 25

~2,500 Class C violations
5 boroughs geographic spread
1,122 total buildings

Habitability failures. Day-to-day conditions that are immediately hazardous to residents.

VS

AKAM top 25

~1,900 Class C violations
$5.5M LL11 penalty fees
543 total buildings

Fee abandonment. Lets facade deadlines expire and absorbs the financial penalty.

THE 25 WORST FIRSTSERVICE BUILDINGS

Ranked by Class C violations.

Class C violations are HPD's highest severity — conditions that are immediately hazardous to life and health. These 25 buildings represent the worst-performing properties in FirstService's 1,122-building portfolio.

# Address Borough Class C Violations
16801 Bay ParkwayBrooklyn212
2850 East 31st StreetBrooklyn201
3255 Eastern ParkwayBrooklyn191
4304 10th StreetBrooklyn150
5344 West 72nd StreetManhattan143
6151 East Mosholu Pkwy NBronx130
71925 Quentin RoadBrooklyn115
82686 Morris AvenueBronx109
9201 Brighton 1st RoadBrooklyn100
10402 Bay Ridge ParkwayBrooklyn98
11298 10th StreetBrooklyn95
12715 West 175th StreetManhattan88
13215 West 116th StreetManhattan87
14275 Park AvenueBrooklyn84
15143-50 Hoover AvenueQueens76
1642-22 Ketcham StreetQueens74
17300 West 79th StreetManhattan71
18310 Lenox RoadBrooklyn67
19790 Riverside DriveManhattan66
202805 Heath AvenueBronx66
211840 Grand ConcourseBronx66
2298 Morningside AvenueManhattan65
2399-52 66th RoadQueens55
24123-25 82nd AvenueQueens53
253535 DeKalb AvenueBronx53

Source: HPD Violations (NYC Open Data). Class C = immediately hazardous to life and health.

DATA SOURCE

Public records. 1,122 buildings.

The FirstService Residential portfolio was identified through analysis of publicly available NYC housing registration records. Every building on this page is verifiable through city data. The methodology is proprietary but the underlying data is not.

RIGHT OF REPLY

We believe in hearing both sides.

FirstService Residential has not yet been contacted for comment on this page. Per our Editorial Standards, we will request comment before publication and include any response verbatim, up to 500 words, alongside the relevant content.

1,122 buildings. 5,610 hazardous violations.
Zero regulatory consequences.

The largest managing agent in New York City operates without a state license, without a public complaint registry, and without a disciplinary body. Every data point on this page comes from free public records.

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