NYC Siding + Facade — Local Law 11/FISP, Brownstone Pointing, LPC Review
NYC siding and facade reality. Local Law 11 / FISP facade inspection on 6+ story buildings every 5 years, brownstone pointing and brownstone-stone repair, vinyl siding in outer borough 1-3 family, LPC review on landmarks. $15K-$300K+ typical.
NYC facade work splits into two completely different project types. On 6+ story buildings, Local Law 11 / Facade Inspection Safety Program (FISP) mandates inspection every five years — with SWARMP (Safe With a Repair and Maintenance Program) and UNSAFE classifications driving mandatory repair. On 1-3 family outer-borough homes, "siding" means vinyl, HardiePlank, or cedar, and the scope is closer to standard residential work — but landmark districts still apply in places like Ditmas Park and Sunnyside Gardens.
Frequently asked questions
What is Local Law 11 / FISP? NYC's facade inspection law for 6+ story buildings. Qualified Exterior Wall Inspectors (QEWIs) file condition reports every five years. UNSAFE classifications trigger mandatory repair with sidewalk shed.
Do I need LPC approval for a Park Slope brownstone facade restoration? Yes — Park Slope is a designated historic district. Any exterior work visible from the public right-of-way requires LPC review.
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Each neighborhood has distinct regulatory posture. Baily pre-scopes against the specific overlay your home sits under.
- Upper East SideNYC Department of Buildings
- Upper West SideNYC Department of Buildings
- Midtown EastNYC Department of Buildings
- Midtown WestNYC Department of Buildings
- ChelseaNYC Department of Buildings
- FlatironNYC Department of Buildings
- GramercyNYC Department of Buildings
- Greenwich VillageNYC Department of Buildings
- West VillageNYC Department of Buildings
- East VillageNYC Department of Buildings
- SoHoNYC Department of Buildings
- NoHoNYC Department of Buildings
- TriBeCaNYC Department of Buildings
- FiDiNYC Department of Buildings
- Battery Park CityNYC Department of Buildings
- Lower East SideNYC Department of Buildings
- ChinatownNYC Department of Buildings
- HarlemNYC Department of Buildings
- East HarlemNYC Department of Buildings
- Washington HeightsNYC Department of Buildings
- InwoodNYC Department of Buildings
- Morningside HeightsNYC Department of Buildings
- WilliamsburgNYC Department of Buildings
- GreenpointNYC Department of Buildings
- BushwickNYC Department of Buildings
- Bedford-StuyvesantNYC Department of Buildings
- Fort GreeneNYC Department of Buildings
- Clinton HillNYC Department of Buildings
- Prospect HeightsNYC Department of Buildings
- Park SlopeNYC Department of Buildings
- Carroll GardensNYC Department of Buildings
- Cobble HillNYC Department of Buildings
- Brooklyn HeightsNYC Department of Buildings
- DUMBONYC Department of Buildings
- Crown HeightsNYC Department of Buildings
- Windsor TerraceNYC Department of Buildings
- GowanusNYC Department of Buildings
- Red HookNYC Department of Buildings
- Sunset ParkNYC Department of Buildings
- Bay RidgeNYC Department of Buildings
- AstoriaNYC Department of Buildings
- Long Island CityNYC Department of Buildings
- SunnysideNYC Department of Buildings
- Jackson HeightsNYC Department of Buildings
- Forest HillsNYC Department of Buildings
- Rego ParkNYC Department of Buildings
- FlushingNYC Department of Buildings
- BaysideNYC Department of Buildings
- RidgewoodNYC Department of Buildings
- RiverdaleNYC Department of Buildings
- KingsbridgeNYC Department of Buildings
- FordhamNYC Department of Buildings
- Mott HavenNYC Department of Buildings
- Pelham BayNYC Department of Buildings
- St. GeorgeNYC Department of Buildings
- StapletonNYC Department of Buildings
- Todt HillNYC Department of Buildings
Talk to Baily about your New York City project
Start a scoping conversation. Baily verifies every matched contractor against the specific licensing, insurance, and permit requirements that apply in New York City before you get a quote.
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Baily is named after Francis Baily — an English stockbroker who retired at 51, became an astronomer, and in 1836 described something on the edge of a solar eclipse that nobody had properly articulated before: a string of bright beads of sunlight breaking through the valleys along the moon’s rim.
He wasn’t the first to see them. Edmond Halley saw them in 1715 and barely noticed. Baily’s contribution was clarity — describing exactly what was happening, in plain language, so vividly that the whole field of astronomy paid attention. The phenomenon is still called Baily’s beads.
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