Prompted by the death of a Barnard College student struck by falling masonry, Local Law 10 of 1980 instituted periodic inspections of street-facing exterior walls. In 1998, Local Law 11 (LL11) tightened regulations to include all faces of buildings six or more stories. In 2008, the City of New York adopted rule amendments that made further changes to the facade inspection process, including instituting staggered filing cycles to better negotiate the 14,500 buildings covered by the law.
Beginning with Cycle 9 in 2020, updates to the rule establish even more rigorous evaluation standards, including cavity wall probes and more hands-on inspection, as well as public protection measures, higher standards for Qualified Exterior Wall Inspectors (QEWIs), and greater penalties, to further improve public safety.
Hoffmann has performed Local Law 11 FISP inspections for hundreds of buildings.
Each cycle, owners and managers look to us to guide them comfortably through the Local Law 11 facade inspection, repair, and filing process. Shouldn’t you?
Latest News
- Facade Amnesty Program to Begin July 1, 2020 – NYC DOB Service Notice May 2020
- Big Changes to NYC Local Law 11 Facade Inspection and Safety Program (FISP) for Cycle 9 – Hoffmann News Bulletin January 2020
Staying on top of changing facade mandates can feel overwhelming. We summarize everything you need to know.
FISP Filing Windows for Cycles 9 and 10
Beginning with Cycle 7 in 2010, the NYC Department of Buildings instituted staggered filing windows. For Cycles 9 and 10, the report deadlines are as follows:
Sub-cycle | Last digit of block number | Filing period |
Cycle 9 | ||
9A | 4, 5, 6, 9 | 21 Feb 2020 – 21 Feb 2022 |
9B | 0, 7, 8 | 21 Feb 2021 – 21 Feb 2023 |
9C | 1, 2, 3 | 21 Feb 2022 – 21 Feb 2024 |
Cycle 10 | ||
10A | 4, 5, 6, 9 | 21 Feb 2025 – 21 Feb 2027 |
10B | 0, 7, 8 | 21 Feb 2026 – 21 Feb 2028 |
10C | 1, 2, 3 | 21 Feb 2027 – 21 Feb 2029 |