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Queens renovation guide

Queens Co-op & Condo Alteration Agreements: A Renovation Guide

Before a contractor lifts a single tool in a Queens co-op or condo, the building usually requires a signed alteration agreement. This guide explains what that document covers, the requirements it imposes, how approval works, and how to assemble a package that gets approved.

If you own a co-op or condo in Queens and want to renovate, the single most important document you will sign before any work begins is the alteration agreement. This is a binding contract between you and your building (the co-op corporation or the condo board) that spells out exactly what you may change, who must approve it, what insurance everyone must carry, how your contractor must behave on site, and what happens if something goes wrong. No reputable Queens contractor will start swinging a hammer until that agreement is fully executed.

In short: yes, you almost always need board approval to renovate a Queens co-op or condo, and the alteration agreement is how that approval is formalized. The process typically runs four to twelve weeks before construction, depends heavily on the scope of your project, and is stricter for co-ops than for condos because in a co-op you own shares, not real estate. Plumbing, electrical, gas, structural changes, and anything touching the building envelope draw the most scrutiny.

This guide walks you through how board approval and alteration agreements actually work in Queens buildings, from prewar Forest Hills elevators to the high-rise condos of Rego Park, so you can plan a co-op and condo renovation that gets approved the first time and finishes without a stop-work letter from your managing agent.

What is a co-op or condo alteration agreement?

An alteration agreement is the rulebook for your renovation, signed by you, often co-signed by your contractor, and approved by the board or its managing agent. It converts the building's general bylaws and house rules into a specific, project-by-project contract. Once signed, it governs everything from the hours your crew can run a tile saw to the exact route they take through the lobby.

Most agreements cover the same core ground:

  • A detailed scope of work, often with architectural drawings attached
  • Insurance requirements for you and every contractor on site
  • Permitting obligations, including who pulls NYC Department of Buildings (DOB) permits
  • Working hours, noise limits, and elevator or freight rules
  • Protection of common areas and neighboring units
  • A security deposit or escrow the building can draw on for damage
  • Liability for any defect that later affects the building or other residents

The agreement protects the building far more than it protects you, which is exactly why understanding it before you sign matters. A seasoned general contractor who works regularly in Queens buildings will have read hundreds of these and can flag the clauses that quietly shift risk onto you.

The alteration agreement is not paperwork to rush through. It is the contract that determines whether your renovation finishes on schedule or gets shut down on day three by a managing agent who never received your insurance certificates.

Do you really need board approval to renovate in Queens?

In the vast majority of cases, yes. The depth of approval depends on your ownership structure and the work you are doing.

Co-ops: you own shares, so the board owns more control

In a Queens co-op, you do not own your apartment outright. You own shares in a corporation and hold a proprietary lease on your unit. That structure gives the board broad authority. Many co-ops in neighborhoods like Forest Hills, Kew Gardens, and Rego Park require board sign-off for nearly any change beyond paint and flooring finishes. Moving a wall, relocating a sink, or upgrading electrical service almost always triggers a full review.

Boards can, and do, say no. They can also attach conditions, such as requiring a licensed plumber for any pipe work or mandating sound insulation under new floors. The proprietary lease usually gives them this right explicitly.

Condos: more freedom inside your walls, still rules at the boundary

Condo owners hold a deed to their unit, so you generally have more latitude with purely interior, non-structural cosmetic work. But the moment your apartment renovation touches common elements, the plumbing risers, the structural slab, the building's electrical, or anything shared, the condo board's alteration process kicks in. Condo agreements tend to be slightly less restrictive than co-op agreements, but the insurance and permitting demands are usually identical.

Either way, skipping approval is a serious mistake. Buildings routinely issue stop-work orders, impose fines, and in extreme cases require owners to undo unapproved work at their own expense.

What does the board approval process look like step by step?

While every Queens building has its own quirks, the sequence is remarkably consistent. Here is the typical path from idea to construction.

  1. Review your governing documents. Pull your proprietary lease or condo declaration, the bylaws, and the house rules. They tell you what is allowed and what is forbidden before you spend a dollar on design.
  2. Develop your scope and drawings. For anything structural or involving plumbing and gas, you will need stamped plans from a licensed architect or engineer. A kitchen remodel that relocates the sink or a bathroom renovation that moves the waste line will require this.
  3. Submit the alteration application. This package usually includes the signed agreement, drawings, contractor licenses, and insurance certificates.
  4. Building or engineer review. Many Queens buildings hire their own engineer to review your plans at your expense. Budget for this fee.
  5. Board vote or managing agent approval. Some boards meet monthly, which is why timing matters so much.
  6. Pull DOB permits. Once the building approves, permits are filed with the city.
  7. Construction begins under the agreement's rules.

The single biggest cause of delay is an incomplete application. Missing insurance certificates, an architect's drawing that lacks a required note, or a contractor whose license details do not match the filing will all send your package back to the bottom of the pile. Working with a contractor who handles DOB permits and expediting keeps these pieces aligned from the start. If you want a deeper look at the city side of this, our explainer on how Queens DOB permits work is a useful companion.

What insurance does the building require, and why so much?

Insurance is where alteration agreements get unforgiving. Buildings have learned the hard way that a flood from a fifth-floor bathroom or a fire from faulty wiring can cause six figures of damage to units below. So they require robust coverage and, crucially, the right paperwork proving it.

A typical Queens co-op or condo alteration agreement requires your contractor to carry:

  • General liability insurance, often with minimums of one to two million dollars per occurrence
  • Workers' compensation for every worker on site, which is mandatory under New York law
  • Disability and sometimes employer's liability coverage
  • Additional insured endorsements naming the co-op corporation or condo association, the managing agent, and sometimes the board members individually

That additional insured language is the detail that trips up homeowners hiring an unlicensed handyman. If your worker cannot produce a certificate of insurance naming your specific building entities, the managing agent will reject the application. A properly insured and licensed contractor produces these certificates as a routine first step, which is one of the most practical reasons to be careful about how you choose a Queens general contractor.

If a contractor hesitates when your building asks them to be named as an additional insured, that hesitation is telling you they may not carry the coverage your agreement demands. Walk away.

What building rules actually govern the work on site?

Once approved, the alteration agreement and house rules control the daily reality of your project. These operational rules frustrate more renovations than the approval process itself, because they directly limit how fast a crew can work.

Quiet hours and working hours

Most Queens buildings restrict noisy, or "hard," construction to weekday business hours, commonly something like 9 a.m. to 4 or 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Many forbid loud work on weekends and holidays entirely. "Hard" work means anything with a hammer drill, tile saw, or demolition. Quiet finishing work such as painting or cabinet installation may be allowed slightly later, but you should never assume so.

These windows matter enormously for scheduling. A demolition phase that would take two days in a single-family Maspeth house can stretch across a full week in a Forest Hills co-op simply because the crew can only run loud tools for a few hours a day. Realistic planning here is essential, and our guide to a typical Queens renovation timeline reflects these building constraints.

Elevator, freight, and access rules

In elevator buildings, you usually must reserve the freight or service elevator in advance, pad it before moving materials, and use only designated entrances. Many buildings require all debris to leave through a specific route and forbid the passenger lobby for construction traffic entirely. Some cap the number of workers in the building at once.

Protection of common areas

Expect requirements to lay floor protection from the freight elevator to your door, to control dust at your unit's threshold, and to clean common areas daily. The security deposit the building holds exists precisely to cover scratched lobby tile or a dented elevator cab.

Plumbing, gas, and water shutoffs

Shutting off water or gas affects every unit on the riser, so buildings tightly control it. You typically must give advance notice, schedule shutoffs for limited windows, and use a licensed plumber the building approves. This is one more reason a full home remodeling project in a multi-unit building needs a contractor fluent in building coordination, not just construction.

How is renovating a Queens co-op different from a house?

Queens has an unusually diverse housing stock, from the freestanding Tudors of Forest Hills Gardens to dense apartment corridors along Queens Boulevard. Renovating an apartment is a fundamentally different animal from renovating a detached home, and the differences shape your budget and timeline.

  • You answer to a board, not just the city. In a house, your main gatekeeper is the DOB. In a co-op or condo, you have two gatekeepers, and the building's review usually comes first.
  • Your neighbors are inches away. Noise, dust, and water travel through shared walls, floors, and risers. The rules exist to protect them, and they will complain to the board if you cross a line.
  • Logistics are constrained. No driveway dumpster, no all-day demolition, limited elevator access, and strict debris routes.
  • Structural changes are heavily restricted. You generally cannot touch load-bearing elements or the building envelope without engineering and board approval, where a homeowner doing structural remodeling in a private house has more freedom.

None of this means apartment renovations are not worth it. Queens apartments, especially the spacious prewar units in Forest Hills and the postwar layouts in Rego Park, offer terrific bones. It simply means the process rewards preparation. If your building is a vintage one, our piece on renovating a Queens prewar co-op digs into the plaster, wiring, and pipe realities you will likely encounter.

What renovations do Queens boards scrutinize most?

Not all projects draw the same level of review. Knowing where boards focus helps you assemble the right documentation up front.

Kitchens and bathrooms

These are the most common apartment projects and among the most scrutinized, because they involve water, gas, and waterproofing directly above someone else's ceiling. Boards often require licensed plumbers, electrical inspection, and a waterproof membrane under new bathroom floors. A kitchen remodeling project that keeps fixtures in place sails through far faster than one that relocates the sink and stove. If you are weighing layout changes, our notes on small kitchen layout ideas can help you maximize space without moving plumbing.

Flooring

Co-ops are famously strict about floors because footstep noise carries to the unit below. Many require a minimum percentage of floor area to be carpeted, or a specific underlayment with a documented sound rating. This single rule has derailed countless hardwood dreams, so check it before you choose materials.

Electrical and HVAC upgrades

Adding circuits, upgrading a panel, or installing a through-wall air conditioner often requires both board and DOB approval, and sometimes confirmation that the building's electrical capacity can handle the load. Many owners pair these upgrades with broader home energy efficiency improvements while the walls are already open.

Combining units or moving walls

Combining two adjacent apartments, or removing a wall to open a layout, is a major project requiring stamped engineering, full board review, and DOB permits. These are the most complex apartment renovations and benefit enormously from a contractor who has done a full whole-home renovation in a multi-unit building. An open-plan transformation in particular, as we cover in our open-concept renovation guide, almost always touches structure or risers and triggers the deepest scrutiny.

How much does the alteration process add to your timeline and budget?

Homeowners often budget for construction and forget the approval process has its own costs and calendar. Both deserve a line item.

On timing, expect the board and permit phase to run roughly four to twelve weeks before construction starts, depending on scope and how often the board meets. Cosmetic work with minimal review may clear in a few weeks. A unit combination with engineering review can take months. Building this lead time into your plan prevents the frustration of a contractor ready to start while your application sits in review.

On cost, beyond the construction itself, plan for several potential line items that vary widely by building:

  • An alteration application or processing fee charged by the managing agent
  • The building engineer's plan review fee, which you typically pay
  • A refundable security deposit or escrow
  • Architect or engineer fees for stamped drawings when required
  • DOB permit and filing fees

These are real but manageable when you know about them in advance. For a fuller picture of what apartment and whole-home work runs in the borough, our breakdown of Queens home renovation costs and the dedicated guides on kitchen remodel costs and bathroom remodel costs give realistic ranges. Actual figures depend on your building, your scope, and current material prices, so treat any number as a starting estimate rather than a quote.

How does a contractor help you get approved the first time?

The difference between a smooth approval and a stalled one usually comes down to preparation, and that is where an experienced contractor earns their fee long before demolition.

A contractor who works regularly in Queens buildings will:

  • Read your specific alteration agreement and flag clauses that affect scope, scheduling, or your liability
  • Provide certificates of insurance naming the exact building entities, in the exact format the managing agent wants
  • Coordinate stamped drawings with a licensed architect or engineer when required
  • Sequence the work around your building's quiet hours and elevator rules so the schedule is realistic from day one
  • Communicate with the managing agent and super so shutoffs and deliveries are scheduled, not improvised

This matters across the borough, whether you are updating a one-bedroom in Kew Gardens, reconfiguring a family-sized unit in Forest Hills, or refreshing a high-floor condo in Rego Park. The buildings differ, but the discipline is the same. The same logistical thinking applies whether you live in a central-Queens elevator building near central Queens or a smaller walk-up.

It is worth noting that this guidance is specific to co-ops and condos. If you actually own a two- or three-family house rather than an apartment, the rules are entirely different, and our two-family renovation guide and our 2 and 3-family renovation service cover that path. Likewise, common pitfalls that sink apartment projects are collected in our list of renovation mistakes to avoid.

Frequently asked questions

Can a Queens co-op board reject my renovation entirely?

Yes. Because you own shares rather than the apartment itself, the proprietary lease typically gives the board broad authority to deny alterations or attach conditions. Boards most often reject projects that threaten the building's plumbing, structure, or electrical capacity, or that violate house rules like flooring sound requirements. Submitting a complete, well-documented application greatly improves your odds of approval.

How long does board approval take before I can start construction?

For most Queens buildings, plan on roughly four to twelve weeks from submitting your alteration application to starting work, though this varies widely. Cosmetic projects with light review can move faster, while unit combinations or structural changes that need engineering review take longer. The board's meeting schedule and the completeness of your package are the two biggest factors.

What insurance does my contractor need for a co-op or condo job?

Buildings generally require general liability coverage, mandatory New York workers' compensation, and often disability coverage, with the co-op corporation or condo association named as an additional insured. The exact limits and entity names come from your specific alteration agreement. A licensed, insured contractor provides these certificates as a routine first step in the application.

Are there limits on when construction can happen in my building?

Almost always. Most Queens co-ops and condos restrict noisy work to weekday business hours and prohibit it on weekends and holidays. Buildings also commonly regulate freight elevator use, debris routes, and water or gas shutoffs. These rules directly affect your timeline, so they should be factored into the schedule before work begins.

Do condo owners have more freedom than co-op owners?

Generally yes, for purely interior cosmetic work, because condo owners hold a deed to their unit rather than shares in a corporation. However, any work touching common elements such as plumbing risers, the structural slab, or shared systems still triggers the condo board's alteration process. Insurance and permitting requirements are usually just as strict for condos as for co-ops.

Planning a renovation in a Queens co-op or condo and want it approved the first time? CityCore Builders is a licensed, insured general contractor serving all of Queens, and we handle alteration agreements, insurance certificates, board coordination, and DOB permits as part of the job. Call us at (929) 699-3306 or request a free estimate and we will help you map the board process before you ever sign the agreement.

Planning a Queens renovation

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From scope and drawings to insurance and permits, we can prepare a submission that meets your building's alteration agreement.