30 Daleham Street
Composite verdict
This is a 1-family, 2-floor home built in 1960 on Staten Island, owned by Patricia E. Gaffey. HPD violation data is not available — single-family homes are typically exempt from HPD registration, so that score of 100 is a default placeholder and carries no meaning here. Rent stabilization data is also unavailable, which is expected for a 1-unit property. What the data does show is genuinely low risk across most dimensions: a crime score of 99/100 (A grade, 0 violent and 0 property incidents), only 1 noise complaint in the past 12 months (A grade, 'very quiet'), no bedbug filings in 3 years, and 0 open lead violations — though the neighborhood has essentially no walkable amenities within 800 meters and no subway access, so car dependency is a real practical consideration.
Class B
Class C
past 12 months
units
(out of 100)
rent
rating
min walk
(311 complaints)
errands grade
nearby
- The building was built in 1960 and is 66 years old — what major systems (roof, boiler/HVAC, plumbing, electrical wiring) have been updated, and can you provide documentation or approximate dates for those upgrades?
- Since HPD registration data is not available for this single-family home, can the owner provide a written maintenance log or repair history for the past few years so you can assess how responsive they've been to issues?
- There are 37 parking-related 311 complaints in the area, including 27 for illegal parking and 10 for blocked driveways — does the property include dedicated off-street parking, and has the driveway been blocked by neighbors in the past?
- The amenities data shows zero restaurants, zero grocery stores, zero pharmacies, and zero cafes within 800 meters, with an F walkability grade — what is the realistic driving distance to the nearest grocery store and pharmacy, and is a car required for daily errands?
- There are no subway stations nearby — what are the primary transit options (bus lines, ferry connections) for commuting, and how frequent is service?
- The building is a 1-unit, 1-family home built in 1960 — are there any known issues with the foundation, basement moisture, or windows, and has the property ever been tested for lead paint given its age?
- Given the building's age of 66 years, inspect the visible infrastructure closely: look for signs of aging electrical panels (fuse boxes vs. circuit breakers), water stains on ceilings or walls indicating past leaks, and the condition of windows and exterior siding.
- Walk the driveway and street frontage — 10 blocked-driveway complaints in the area suggest this is a recurring local issue; check whether the driveway access is clearly marked and whether neighboring parking is tight.
- Assess the surrounding block and neighborhood on foot: with zero walkable amenities within 800 meters, confirm your comfort with the isolation level, check street lighting (10 street-light condition complaints were filed nearby), and note the general upkeep of adjacent properties.
30 Daleham Street sits in Staten Island, ZIP 10308. No subway stations are within an 800-meter walk — expect to rely on buses or rideshare. Nearby public schools include The David Marquis School of the Arts (grades Pre-K to 12), a 1-minute walk. Noise activity over the past 12 months is very quiet — 1 noise complaint filed via 311, mostly residential noise. NYPD CompStat data places this precinct at a 99/100 safety score.
- SBLENDIDO, FRANK
- A&J CONTRACTING AND RENOVATIONS INC
- ELVERTON CONVENIENCE, INC
- The David Marquis School of the Arts
- P.S. 032 The Gifford School
Latest news from Weverit.
Tenant guides, law changes, and neighborhood reports — written in plain English, sourced from the same public records that power Weverit building reports.

A Rent Freeze Is Officially on the Table
The Rent Guidelines Board cast its preliminary vote Thursday at LaGuardia Community College. For the first time since 2016, zero is mathematically inside the range of possible outcomes for stabilized rents. The June vote will choose the number inside it.
Read article →
Who NYC Rent Actually Works For
Three NYC households earning $85,000, $150,000, and $300,000. Same city, same rent prices, three different mathematical realities. The question of whether renting in New York is "possible" depends entirely on which of the three is being described.
Read article →
The Sign in Your Lobby
A new sign appeared in the lobby of every NYC building with at least one rent-stabilized unit this winter. The text is unremarkable. The thing the sign does not say is the more interesting story.
Read article →
The 99-Unit Pattern
In the past two years, NYC developers have filed permits for more than 150 residential buildings with one thing in common: each has exactly 99 apartments. The number is not coincidence. It is a tax break threshold — and it is changing what gets built across the city.
Read article →
NYC Is No Longer One Housing Market
On a Sunday in Bay Ridge, a detached house drew nine offers in four days. Forty minutes away in Downtown Brooklyn, a condo sat on the market for two months. Both are part of the same NYC housing market. Increasingly, they behave like different economies.
Read article →
A 311 call is data. It is not necessarily evidence.
New Yorkers made roughly 3.4 million calls to 311 last year. Renters increasingly use that data to assess buildings and neighborhoods before signing. The patterns are real. They do not always mean what they look like.
Read article →Recent building reports from Weverit.
The most recently generated reports from real NYC addresses — independent due-diligence on buildings tenants are actually checking.
7913 15 Avenue
Free public-records report for 7913 15 Avenue: violations, complaints, rent stabilization, transit, schools.
Read report →196-45 45 Drive
Free public-records report for 196-45 45 Drive: violations, complaints, rent stabilization, transit, schools.
Read report →1600 B'way
Free public-records report for 1600 B'way: violations, complaints, rent stabilization, transit, schools.
Read report →2106 Bayridge Parkway
Free public-records report for 2106 Bayridge Parkway: violations, complaints, rent stabilization, transit, schools.
Read report →100-27 Reverend W Gardner Place
Free public-records report for 100-27 Reverend W Gardner Place: violations, complaints, rent stabilization, transit, schools.
Read report →495 Garage East 18 Street
Free public-records report for 495 Garage East 18 Street: violations, complaints, rent stabilization, transit, schools.
Read report →