CITYCOREBUILDERSCityCore Builders · Queens, New York
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Parapet repair, rebuilding, and Local Law 126 observation support for Queens row houses, multi-family, and mixed-use buildings, from Woodhaven to Jamaica. We fix leaning, cracked, and crumbling parapets, reset coping and flashing, and help you stay ahead of the city's annual inspection rule.
The basics
A parapet is the section of wall that rises above the roofline, common on the attached row houses and mixed-use buildings across Ozone Park and Richmond Hill. Because a parapet is exposed to weather on both faces, it is one of the first parts of a building to fail, leaning, cracking, losing coping stones, or shedding brick onto the sidewalk below. New York City now requires owners of buildings with public-facing parapets to have them observed every year, which has made repair and compliance a live issue for a lot of Queens owners.
Scope

Taking down and rebuilding leaning or failing parapets with sound brick, ties, and a proper cap.

Cutting out failed mortar and sealing cracks before water and freeze cycles take the wall apart.

Resetting or replacing coping stones and flashing so the top of the wall sheds water instead of soaking it up.

Membrane and sealing details at the roof-to-parapet joint to stop the leaks that rot the wall from inside.

Adding anchors and ties to pull a bulging or out-of-plumb parapet back into a stable, connected wall.

Repairs that resolve the conditions an annual parapet observation flags, with documentation of the work done.
NYC specifics
Under Local Law 126, since January 1, 2024 owners of buildings with a parapet fronting a public right-of-way have to have it observed every year by a competent person, regardless of the building's height. Detached one- and two-family homes are exempt, as are buildings with a barrier that keeps the public away from the wall, but the attached row houses, multi-family, and mixed-use buildings that fill these neighborhoods are generally covered. The observation report is kept on file for six years and shown to the DOB on request rather than filed each year.
If an observation finds an unsafe condition, the owner has to notify the DOB right away, put up public protection such as a sidewalk shed or netting, and correct the condition within 90 days. Missing the inspection or failing to produce the report on request can bring penalties in the range of $1,250 to $10,000 per building. A larger rebuild can also need its own DOB permit and a sidewalk shed while the work is underway, and historic districts add LPC review.
The annual Local Law 126 observation for public-facing parapets, at any height. The exemption for detached one- and two-family homes. A six-year retention requirement for the report. An unsafe finding that means public protection and repair within 90 days. Penalties from $1,250 to $10,000 for non-compliance. DOB permit and sidewalk shed for a larger rebuild.
Coverage
We repair and rebuild parapets across the borough, with steady demand on the row-house and mixed-use blocks of southern Queens. Start with the borough hub or jump to your neighborhood.
Get started
Whether you are facing an unsafe finding or staying ahead of the annual rule, send us details and we will handle the repair, the protection, and the documentation.