How EMPIRE350 LLC shows up on public housing records.
Full ownership history (ACRIS deeds, prior sales, linked LLCs) ships in a later pass — some portfolios span dozens of entities that take time to reconcile.
Adjudicated DOB / ECB cases across this portfolio. Every ticket that went to adjudication — paid, dismissed, or defaulted.
Reviews submitted by tenants across every building in this portfolio. We aggregate the numbers, but surface the voices — good and bad — as pulled quotes.
“Pros: Trash was taken care of on time Communal area clean Maintenance was readily available when I had issues or locked myself out Cons: Intercom didn’t always work”
— 348 EMPIRE BOULEVARD · Brooklyn“Pros: Cheap rent, convient location, close to train and bus. Cons: Chronic: Bedbugs, homeless people camping out in lobby and deficating in lobby, roaches, leaks that never get fixed, bad management, elevator gets stuck all the time. Advi…”
— 348 EMPIRE BOULEVARD · BrooklynThey rank among the tracked portfolios by building count among tracked landlords in New York City.
98% of their units are registered as rent-stabilized with the housing authority.
7 active housing-court litigations are on file across their buildings.
The worst-rated buildings are 348 EMPIRE BOULEVARD, —, and —.
Violations are tracked 0% over the last 24 months.
The head officer runs the portfolio since an unknown year, registered with the local housing authority.
Every time a tenant calls 311, an inspector cites a violation, or a case lands in housing court, it shows up here. The numbers below aggregate across the entire portfolio.
This landlord owns or manages 1 building across New York City. The portfolio sits around the city average on compliance.