The Real Deal New York

Tenants at 143 Ludlow claim landlord driving them out with unsafe conditions

March 06, 2013 03:00PM

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Harvey Epstein of the Urban Justice Center and 143 Ludlow

UPDATED, 4:06 p.m., Mar. 6: Residents of 143 Ludlow Street have sued their landlord, Samy Mahfar of SMA Equities, alleging that the developer tried to drive them out of the building with dangerous and inconvenient conditions. The eight rent-stabilized tenants who live in the Lower East Side property allege that Mahfar’s goal is to bring in market-rate residents.

The tenants allegedly have suffered ceiling collapses, three construction-related fires, multiple incidents of flooding, exposed electrical wiring, as well as intermittent water, heat and electricity. Their suit, filed in housing court, aims to put the building in control of a court-appointed administrator.

Mahfar told The Real Deal that the property is undergoing upgrades — including new stairs, a new roof, a new garbage chute and a revamped electrical system — but acknowledged that it was in rough shape when he purchased it this past summer. “We treat the tenants like…family lives there,” he said, inviting anyone to take a look.

The building is facing 145 housing code violations, according to the suit.

Mahfar said he did not believe they were violations, but rather complaints, and noted that he inherited more than 100 of them from the previous owner. He has “cured 95 percent of the 145,” he said, adding that he needs access to tenants’ apartments to make some repairs, such as repainting ceiling cracks.

He declined to comment on the tenants’ allegation that he brought a relocation expert to the building.

However, Brandon Kielbasa, lead organizer at the Cooper Square Committee, a tenants’ rights organization that is representing the tenants along with the Urban Justice Center, disputed this account. “There’s no issue with access,” he told The Real Deal, adding that tenants are begging Mahfar to come in to make repairs.

Harvey Epstein, associate director of the Urban Justice Center, told The Real Deal that the building has ongoing problems and violations in the building. “There are serious conditions in the building that they’re not rectifying,” he said. –Zachary Kussin

  • Roseville property management

    Gee whiz, I don’t blame them for getting out of there. It’s one thing to have hard-to-please tenants, but it’s another thing to be so negligent towards tenants who have reasonable concerns. We’re a Minnesota property management company with a strong commitment to keeping tenants happy and safe. I sure can’t imagine our tenants ever accusing us of trying to drive them out – yikes!

  • Gainesville Condos

    It’s hard to imagine that anyone would treat tenants that way. A few cracks in the wall is one thing, but ceiling collapses? That’s crazy!

  • LESer

    Harvey Epstein has a long history of displacing tenants.

  • Michael

    Can’t comment on the real intent of this owner, but I do know that we’ve had tenants repeatedly calling the city with complaints who wouldn’t give us access to make repairs. We ultimately had to spend months in court simply trying to get access. I’m sure there are terrible landlords out there, but there are also some horrible tenants.

  • Jon

    or how about that extra 6 feet they added to the roof of the building without a permit????

  • Dr. Peter Zazzali

    I have spent several days visiting a colleague at 143 Ludlow over the past month and the living conditions in the building are in a word, abominable. There is no heat, the stairwell was blocked, the floorboards coming apart, the construction noise deafening, and terrible air quality. It is unimaginable how anyone could live there. It is beyond uncomfortable, but downright dangerous.

    Dr. Peter Zazzali

  • Xxxxxx

    I visited this building recently and all I can say is that I wish I lives there. The building is absolutely beautiful.

    • john

      lol- sma renovations are ghetto.

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