Local Law 97 · Building diligence

Local Law 97 exposure at Steinway Tower.

Reported emissions, current and 2030 caps, estimated annual penalty exposure, and per-unit monthly impact for 107 WEST 57 STREET — built on NYC’s public LL84 benchmarking dataset and PLUTO tax-lot records. Latest available reporting year: 2024.

This is exposure analysis, not a penalty prediction. Real outcomes depend on offset purchases, REC strategy, future cap rule-making, and capital decisions by the board. The point is to surface whether the building is well-positioned, facing the 2030 cliff, or already in material exposure — and to put that read in the context an underwriter would use.
Address
107 WEST 57 STREET
Year built
1924
Total square feet
572,348
Residential units
60
Primary use
Multifamily Housing
Reporting year
2024
BIN / BBL
1023728 / 1010107507
Reported emissions
4,148 mtCO₂e/yr
Overall exposure
🟠

Material — penalties in current period, escalating in 2030

Reported emissions exceed the 2024–2029 cap, with substantially higher exposure in the 2030 period. The building is likely already evaluating compliance pathways; expect maintenance increases, assessment exposure, or both over the next 5–10 years.

Penalty math by compliance period
2024–2029 (current period)
3,863 mtCO₂e/yr cap
Excess over cap
284 mtCO₂e
Annual penalty exposure
$76,209/yr
Per unit / month impact
$106/unit/mo
2030–2034 (the cliff)
2,329 mtCO₂e/yr cap
Excess over cap
1,818 mtCO₂e
Annual penalty exposure
$487,292/yr
Per unit / month impact
$677/unit/mo
Risk factors
  • Already over the 2024–2029 cap
    Excess of 284 mtCO2e/year creates immediate penalty exposure of approximately $76,209/year — about $106/unit/month.
  • The 2030 cliff
    Penalty exposure rises from ~$76,209/year in the current period to ~$487,292/year starting 2030 — roughly 6.4× the current burden.
  • Older construction — likely aging mechanicals
    Built 1924. Buildings of this vintage typically have older heating systems (steam, often oil or gas) and weaker envelopes. Compliance pathways usually require deeper capital intervention than newer buildings.
Three plausible ownership scenarios

How a board could plausibly respond to LL97 over the next decade. Each scenario translates the regulatory exposure into the per-unit financial impact a shareholder might actually feel — through maintenance increases, assessments, or a combination.

Scenario A — Minimal intervention

The board makes no major capital investment. Penalties are paid out of operating budget or via maintenance increases. No upgrade-driven assessment in this scenario; pure pay-the-fine path.

10-yr per-unit total
$40,107 $52,139
Monthly per-unit
$334 $434

Often the wrong path long-term — penalties compound and the 2035+ caps are stricter again. But it's how many boards default in year one.

Scenario B — Capital upgrade path

The board funds a meaningful retrofit (heat-pump conversion, envelope work, controls modernization, electrification) via assessment, financing, or reserve drawdown. Penalties eliminated or substantially reduced; long-term operating costs typically lower.

10-yr per-unit total
$75,000 $200,000
Monthly per-unit
$625 $1,667

Higher upfront, lower long-term. The right path for boards with strong reserves and a long-view shareholder base. Many trophy-tier buildings on Park / Fifth / CPW are evaluating this now.

Scenario C — Delayed modernization

The board pays penalties for several years, then funds a retrofit anyway as 2030 cliff or 2035 cap arrives. Combines the recurring penalty burden with the eventual capital event.

10-yr per-unit total
$133,857 $302,139
Monthly per-unit
$1,115 $2,518

Worst of both worlds. Most likely outcome if the board is conservative on capital but doesn't want to fight the law. Worth understanding whether the building is on this trajectory or one of the cleaner two.

Emissions history

Multi-year reported emissions from NYC’s LL84 benchmarking. A downward trend signals the building is already executing an operational or capital response; flat or upward suggests the board hasn’t yet acted.

YearTotal emissions (mtCO₂e)Intensity (kgCO₂e/sf)
20244,1487.25
20234,1197.20
20223,1565.50

Underwriting a purchase at Steinway Tower?

LL97 exposure is one layer of building diligence. Reserves, assessment history, board posture, sponsor sales dynamics, and how the building’s capital plan interacts with the 2030 cliff all matter. The Roebling Team does this layer of work on every client transaction.

For the full building read on Steinway Tower, see the editorial profile — architect, history, board character, recent sales context.

Schedule a 30-minute consultation →
Methodology: exposure analysis runs on NYC’s public LL84 benchmarking and PLUTO datasets. Cap math uses the published 6.75 kgCO₂e/sf (2024–2029) and 4.07 kgCO₂e/sf (2030–2034) multifamily caps with $268/mt CO₂e penalty rate. Real-world penalties may differ based on REC/offset purchases, Article 321 adjustments, and future DOB rule-making.