DISTRICT PROFILE · NYS ASSEMBLY · DISTRICT 24

Assembly District 24, building by building.

Every registered condominium and cooperative inside New York State Assembly District 24 — Jamaica Hills, Briarwood, Jamaica Estates, Holliswood, Oakland Gardens, Hollis Hills, Kew Gardens, and Richmond Hill in eastern Queens — assigned by coordinates against the official district boundary, then joined live to the city's enforcement records. Every figure cites its source and retrieval date (2026-07-03).

45buildings
4,440homes
325open Class C violations
1UNSAFE facade
1vacate order on record

THE UNIVERSE

45 buildings. Half the homes sit in one co-op pocket.

18 condominiums and 27 cooperatives, holding 4,440 residential units. Eight co-ops in Oakland Gardens–Hollis Hills hold 2,205 of those homes — 49.7% of the district total — led by the two largest buildings in the district at 583 and 567 homes. The rest of the stock is smaller: mid-size co-ops and condos through Jamaica Hills–Briarwood, Jamaica Estates, Kew Gardens, and Richmond Hill.

Neighborhood (city tabulation area)CondosCo-opsTotalHomes
Jamaica Hills-Briarwood69151,059
Jamaica Estates-Holliswood5611731
Oakland Gardens-Hollis Hills0882,205
Kew Gardens336296
Richmond Hill314149
South Ozone Park1010
District total1827454,440

Source: the city's tax-roll building file (CCNYC buildings-master), assigned to the district by coordinates against the official Assembly-district boundary file. 3 of the 45 records carry no residential-unit count and are counted as zero homes. Method details at the bottom of this page.

IMMEDIATELY-HAZARDOUS VIOLATIONS

27 of 45 buildings carry open Class C violations.

Class C is HPD's most severe routine violation class: no heat, no hot water, severe leaks, structural hazards. As of 2026-07-03, 27 of the district's 45 buildings (60.0%) carry at least one open Class C violation, and 325 Class C violations stand open district-wide. "Open" is HPD's own status flag; some open violations are longstanding — the count is a stock, not a flow.

Top 10 by open Class C violations

#AddressBBLNeighborhoodTypeUnitsOpen C
1 85-15 139 STREET 4097100002 Jamaica Hills-Briarwood co-op 106 41
2 129-01 JAMAICA AVENUE 4092810044 Richmond Hill co-op 117 39
3 84-50 169 STREET 4098600040 Jamaica Hills-Briarwood co-op 125 35
4 213-06 75 AVENUE 4077480500 Oakland Gardens-Hollis Hills co-op 567 30
5 143-50 HOOVER AVENUE 4097380114 Jamaica Hills-Briarwood co-op 110 29
6 139-05 85 DRIVE 4097110125 Jamaica Hills-Briarwood co-op 48 28
7 73-50 BELL BOULEVARD 4077320002 Oakland Gardens-Hollis Hills co-op 583 24
8 175-06 DEVONSHIRE ROAD 4098840043 Jamaica Estates-Holliswood co-op 82 14
9 139-21 85 DRIVE 4097110032 Jamaica Hills-Briarwood co-op 125 13
10 210-11 75 AVENUE 4077320150 Oakland Gardens-Hollis Hills co-op 270 9

The load concentrates hard: the ten buildings above carry 262 of the district's 325 open Class C violations — 80.6%. Five of the ten are co-ops in Jamaica Hills–Briarwood.

Source: HPD housing-maintenance violation records — public city data, joined per building, retrieved 2026-07-03.

FACADES · VACATE ORDERS · WHO MANAGES

The rest of the enforcement record.

Facade inspections (FISP / Local Law 11)

  • 1 building's most recent facade status is UNSAFE; 10 more are SWARMP (safe with a repair program).
  • Of 7 single-building lots taller than six stories, 3 have no facade filing at all (cycles 6–10).

DOB facade-compliance filing records — public city data, retrieved 2026-07-03. Facade joins use each lot's primary building identifier, which 3 of the 45 tax lots lack — 1 of those taller than six stories, so the no-filing count may understate. 1 record carries no floor count in the tax-lot file.

City-issued vacate orders

  • 1 building has a vacate order on record: a partial vacate order listing fire damage, effective June 2025 and rescinded April 2026, covering 1 home.
  • No order in the district currently stands unrescinded.

HPD vacate-order records — public city data, retrieved 2026-07-03.

Registration & self-managed share

  • 42 buildings hold an HPD property registration; 3 do not.
  • 1 of the 42 registered buildings lists no managing-agent organization — an individual with no firm.
  • New York licenses none of the people doing that work.

HPD property-registration records — public city data, retrieved 2026-07-03. Same method as the 775 Riverside case study.

WHY DISTRICT PROFILES

A building-level baseline for any district.

The rules that govern cooperative and condominium boards — the Business Corporation Law, the Real Property Law, the Martin Act's offering-plan regime — are state law, written in Albany. The city's enforcement records, though, are published building by building, not by Assembly district. This page joins the two: every registered condo and co-op inside the district boundary, with its live enforcement record. CondosCoopsNYC publishes the same profile for other districts — see Council District 18 and Congressional District NY-13 — and it can be built for any Assembly district in the city.

THE FULL LIST

All 45 buildings, sortable.

14 of the district's 45 buildings are profiled in the CCNYC catalog so far (2,538 citywide); the catalog is growing toward 100%. The enforcement figures below come from the live city datasets for all 45 buildings, not from the catalog. Download the full snapshot CSV ↓

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AddressZIPNeighborhoodType UnitsOpen CLife C VacateFISPMgmt

METHOD & SOURCES

How the district list was built.

  • Universe: the CCNYC master building list — 15,108 registered condominium and cooperative buildings citywide, built from the Department of City Planning's tax-lot file (PLUTO 25v4). The tax-lot file carries no Assembly-district assignment, so each building was assigned by its coordinates, tested point-in-polygon against the official state Assembly district boundary file published by the city. 45 buildings fall inside District 24. The district lies entirely within New York City, so the citywide tax-lot file covers all of it.
  • Exclusions, disclosed: 57 of the 15,108 master records citywide carry no coordinates and are excluded from every Assembly-district profile; none of the 57 lies in a District 24 ZIP code. 3 in-district records carry no residential-unit count and enter the homes total as zero.
  • Cross-checks, two independent sources: because the district assignment itself uses the boundary file, it was checked against a second, independent authority — the U.S. Census Bureau's geocoder, which reports the state legislative district (lower house) for a coordinate. Ten randomly sampled buildings were re-queried there: ten of ten return District 24. A separately drawn ten-building sample was re-tested point-in-polygon against the boundary file: ten of ten fall inside. The condo/co-op split and building count were independently recomputed from the master file before publication.
  • Enforcement joins (all public city data, retrieved 2026-07-03): HPD violation records, HPD vacate-order records, DOB facade-compliance filings, and HPD property-registration records with their contact rosters, each joined per building live — not taken from the static master file. Eleven buildings, including the heaviest violation record, were then re-queried one at a time with no batching; every count matched.
  • Limitations: HPD violation counts join at the tax-lot level; facade joins use each lot's primary building identifier, which 3 of the 45 tax lots lack (1 of them taller than six stories, so the no-filing count may understate); "open" violation counts are stocks, not annual flows; "no managing-agent organization" is a registration-record fact, not a claim about day-to-day operations.

Exact dataset references and reproduction steps live on the methodology page. Numbers on this page are frozen to the 2026-07-03 retrieval; they will drift as HPD and DOB records move.