NYCHA buildings score near-zero on standard distress metrics because the city doesn't fine itself, doesn't sue itself, and doesn't put its own buildings on lien lists. Sillview Flare uses a separate tenant-conditions model that measures what residents actually experience.
311 and HPD complaint volume per unit over 90 days, with acceleration vs. prior period. The primary signal of tenant-experienced conditions.
Open HPD Class B/C violations per unit. Even when the city doesn't issue ECB fines to itself, inspectors still document hazardous conditions.
Building age, emergency repair history, and maintenance indicators from DOB and HPD inspection records.
Average distress of other buildings in the same NYCHA development. Systemic management failures affect entire complexes, not just individual buildings.
HPD currently assembles distressed building lists manually from siloed systems. Each agency sees its own slice — violations here, tax liens there, complaints elsewhere.
Sillview automates this weekly. 22+ sources, one ranked list, updated continuously. Portfolio-level analysis catches the landlords that single-building views miss.
The annual Worst Landlords list uses a single metric. Valuable, but narrow. It captures a moment in time.
22+ data sources with portfolio-level analysis, updated weekly. Track deterioration over time, not just a single snapshot.
Alternative Enforcement Program targeting, Safer Homes Act implementation, proactive enforcement prioritization.
Cross-agency coordination with a unified data view across violations, complaints, tax, and litigation.
Data-driven oversight and evidence for housing legislation, including Safer Homes Act monitoring.
Enhanced Worst Landlords methodology — 22+ sources, portfolio analysis, and continuous tracking instead of annual snapshots.
Track city costs from landlord negligence — emergency repairs, relocation, litigation — tied to Sillview Scores and owner portfolios.
See how many buildings in your district meet Safer Homes Act thresholds.
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