26 WEST 119 STREET
26 WEST 119 STREET's Energy & Future-Proofing score is 50/100 — room to improve
Summary
Overall score: 77/100. Energy & Future-Proofing is the area to watch.
Overall score of 77. This legacy preservation asset, built in 1899, shows strong performance in management and asset stability. The weakest pillar is energy and future-proofing. The building has a strong overall score, exceeding the peer median.
Category Scores
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Regulatory Risk Forecast
What Owners and Board Members Need to Know
Scaffold Law (Labor Law 240)
Absolute liability for gravity injuries — applies to routine tasks like painting or window cleaning.
Local Law 97 (Emissions)
Carbon caps now active. Fines compound annually with increasingly strict limits through 2050.
Litigation Exposure
1 case on record for this building.
New York's "Scaffold Law" imposes absolute liability on boards for gravity-related injuries, regardless of fault. It applies to even minor tasks like painting, window cleaning, or exterior repairs using a simple ladder. For unit owners, a vendor's small fall can trigger multi-million dollar judgments exceeding building insurance, directly jeopardizing the personal equity of every neighbor in the building.
Local Law 97 mandates strict carbon limits for large buildings, converting energy usage into a punitive liability. As of January 2024, the law is active, with emissions caps that become increasingly stringent every five years until reaching a net-zero mandate by 2050. For residents, this manifests as recurring maintenance increases or special assessments, while a building's "carbon grade" now directly impacts resale value and buyer interest.
Under the Scaffold Law's absolute liability standard, building owners are responsible for gravity-related injuries regardless of fault or precautions taken. Claims frequently exceed $1 million per incident. (Source: Willis Towers Watson, 2023) Without contractor insurance documentation on file, the building — and by extension, individual unit owners — bears the full financial exposure. Combined with LL97 penalties that compound annually, total regulatory exposure can escalate rapidly for buildings without proactive compliance strategies.
- 1.Require proof of insurance from all vendors — verify General Liability, Workers' Comp, and Umbrella policies before any work begins; contractors should name the building as Additional Insured.
- 2.Review master policy limits annually — consider excess liability coverage to protect against multi-million dollar Scaffold Law judgments.
- 3.Establish a LL97 compliance fund — budget for energy upgrades and potential penalties to avoid surprise special assessments.
- 4.Conduct regular building audits — proactively address violations before they escalate to litigation or regulatory penalties.
Tenant Action
Protect your investment: A $200 seal prevents $2,000+ in water damage repairs. Read the guide →
Maintenance Guides
Did you know? Upholstered furniture harbors 200× more bacteria than a toilet seat. Read the guide →
Keep your outdoor space usable: NYC pollution makes balconies unusable without annual cleaning. Read the guide →
Coordinate Verified Services
Building residents coordinate verified services together — lower costs, less effort.
Group Rates
Neighbors pool buying power for wholesale pricing on building services.
Insured Vendors
Every provider submits insurance documentation, licensing, and building compliance paperwork.
Zero Coordination
Automated scheduling, insurance verification handled, and neighbor polling — no group chats.
Check Another Building
Search for group rates at a different address
Data sourced from NYC Open Data, HPD, DOB, and LL84/LL97 benchmarking reports. Last updated: 4/24/2026
Neighbors unlock group rates when they organize together