40 HANCOCK STREET
40 HANCOCK STREET is a Class C3 (walk-up, pre-1929) building in Staten Island (BBL 5033410008) built in 1931, with 4 residential units.
NYC PLUTO does not list a registered owner of record for this BBL.
MetroDeeds shows no confirmed ACRIS deed transfer for this BBL in the last 5 years of recorded NYC public-records data.
Data sourced daily from NYC PLUTO (Department of City Planning), NYC ACRIS (Department of Finance), and NYC HPD housing-maintenance code violations.
Owner of record
Most recent deed
Building stats
HPD violations
Recent HPD violation details
- Class CInspected Apr 2, 2024§ 27-2005 ADMIN. CODE: REPLACE WITH NEW THE MISSING BUILDING ENTRANCE. DOOR ( NO SECURITY )
- Class CInspected Jan 2, 2024§ 27-2029 ADMIN. CODE: PROVIDE AN ADEQUATE SUPPLY OF HEAT FOR THE APARTMENT IN THE ENTIRE APARTMENT LOCATED AT APT 2F, 2nd STORY, 1st APARTM…
Frequently asked questions about 40 HANCOCK STREET
Who owns 40 HANCOCK STREET?
NYC PLUTO does not list a registered owner of record for this BBL, and MetroDeeds shows no confirmed ACRIS deed transfer in the last 5 years of recorded NYC public-records data.
When was 40 HANCOCK STREET last sold?
MetroDeeds shows no confirmed ACRIS deed transfer for 40 HANCOCK STREET in the last 5 years of recorded NYC public-records data. NYC ACRIS coverage extends back to 1966; an absence in our 5-year window typically means either the BBL has not transacted recently, or the most recent recorded document is not a DEED type (such as a refinance rather than a sale).
How many HPD violations does 40 HANCOCK STREET have?
No open HPD housing-maintenance code violations are on record for 40 HANCOCK STREET. The building is not registered with NYC HPD's landlord-registration system, which is typical for owner-occupied 1-2 family dwellings. HPD violation data is pulled daily from the NYC Open Data violations feed.
What building class is 40 HANCOCK STREET and what does that mean?
40 HANCOCK STREET is NYC building class C3 — Walk-up, pre-1929. A walk-up apartment building constructed before 1929, typically 3-6 stories and often rent-stabilized. Building class is assigned by NYC Department of Finance and recorded in PLUTO; it determines the property's tax class and the regulatory regime that applies.