New York Post

BAD MAINTENANC­E

Broken alarms, faulty ovens at x. blades bldg.

- By NOLAN HICKS and JACK MORPHET nhicks@nypost.com

Busted smoke alarms. Broken ovens. Mold and malfunctio­ning exhaust fans.

Those were among the problems identified by city inspectors in recent reviews of apartments at a Bronx housing tower before it became the scene of the deadliest fire in a generation in New York City, records reviewed by The Post show.

At least 17 people, including eight children, died Sunday after a space heater sparked a fire that flooded the 19-story complex at 333 E. 181st St. in Tremont with smoke.

The decrepit conditions were documented and ordered fixed by the New York City Housing Authority, which was tasked by federal regulation­s with inspecting 12 of the 120 units in the building because it provided those tenants with rent vouchers.

“When I moved here 30 years ago, the building was nice. For the last five years, the maintenanc­e has been lousy,” said Tysena Jacobs, 69, who lives on the 15th floor. “The building is full of rats and mice. The smell of dead rats was so overpoweri­ng you couldn’t breathe.”

Failed inspection­s

Five of the 12 checked apartments failed NYCHA’s inspection­s, which took place between 2019 and 2021.

Two were on the third floor — the same floor where the apartment where the fire broke out.

In Unit 3M, NYCHA’s inspection found no smoke or carbon-monoxide detectors, the living-room door’s plates were broken, as was the storage cabinet, while mold was growing on the ceiling and there was evidence of lead in the paint of a hallway wall.

The agency offered the family a transfer in September 2021, when the landlord failed to fix the problems for two months after the inspection. A representa­tive for the landlord said the company did replace the smoke detector.

Down the hall in 3L, NYCHA’s review in July uncovered a broken oven and several rooms without a required smoke detector. Records show the landlord certified the repairs were made in November.

A third apartment was on the 15th floor, which Fire Commission­er Dan Nigro said was flooded by smoke during Sunday’s fire in part because several doors malfunctio­ned and failed to self-close as required by law.

There, in 15N, inspectors found the smoke detector missing its battery. A representa­tive for the landlord said in a statement that the issue was fixed that same month, but NYCHA did not certify the repair was completed until November.

Overall, the records show NYCHA eventually signed off on the repairs to four of the five units.

But tenants said that often problems would persist or reappear.

“Any time we complained the smoke alarms in our apartment didn’t work, they would take weeks to come and fix them,” said Francisco Javier, 17, who lives on the ninth floor with his sister.

“Even when they fixed the smoke alarms, it wouldn’t be long until they broke again.”

The findings are the latest evidence of the toll that years of apparent mismanagem­ent and disinvestm­ent took on the high-rise, which was heralded upon its completion in the early 1970s as a model for lowand middle-income housing projects.

“Our oven didn’t work, and you could smell gas when it was on, so we removed their oven and replaced it with our own,” said Jeannie Torres, 38, whose 12th-floor apartment was not among those NYCHA was required to inspect but who told The Post that the problems identified by the agency’s reviews were widespread.

“They put me on a waiting list, and I was worried it was dangerous, so I couldn’t wait,” she added.

‘A lesson to be learned’

The Post previously revealed that inspectors from another city agency, the Department of Housing Preservati­on and Developmen­t, busted the building six times in recent years for failing to keep the tower’s self-closing doors in working order.

State Attorney General Letitia James, addressing mourners this week, vowed to probe the blaze and determine whether neglect contribute­d to it.

“I will also use the law both as a sword and as a shield to get to the bottom of this fire,” she said.

“There’s a lesson to be learned about the neglect of government, and there’s a lesson to be learned about why this continues to happen in this corner of The Bronx.”

The building was purchased in 2013 by a firm controlled by real-estate magnate Rubin Schron, who received nearly $25 million in state financing to pay for repairs and renovation­s at the Twin Parks Northwest complex, which also includes two other apartment buildings.

Schron sold all three buildings to a consortium of investors in December 2019 that includes Rick Gropper, who was a member of the housing committee for Mayor Adams’ transition.

“Since the moment we took over the property, we have worked tirelessly to improve conditions for our residents,” said a spokesman for the current ownership group.

“We are cooperatin­g fully with the Fire Department and other city agencies as they investigat­e the cause of this tragic fire, and we are doing all we can to assist our residents.”

Schron did not respond to a message seeking comment.

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 ?? ?? DISASTER: Debris litters a charred hall on the building’s third floor, where Sunday’s deadly fire began. Photos and flowers honoring victims were displayed outside Thursday.
DISASTER: Debris litters a charred hall on the building’s third floor, where Sunday’s deadly fire began. Photos and flowers honoring victims were displayed outside Thursday.

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