State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Mdw > Article-1 > 4

§  4.  Definitions. Certain words and terms when used in this chapter,  unless the context or subject matter requires otherwise, are defined  as  follows:    1. Wherever the word or words "occupied," "is occupied," "used" or "is  used"  appear,  such  word or words shall be construed as if followed by  the words "or is intended, arranged or designed to be used or occupied."    2. The word "shall" is always mandatory.    3. The term "department" shall mean the department,  bureau,  division  or other agency charged with the enforcement of this chapter.    4.  A "dwelling" is any building or structure or portion thereof which  is occupied in whole or in part as the home, residence or sleeping place  of one or more human beings.    5. A "family" is either a person occupying a dwelling and  maintaining  a  household,  with  not more than four boarders, roomers or lodgers, or  two  or  more  persons  occupying  a  dwelling,  living   together   and  maintaining  a  common  household,  with  not  more  than four boarders,  roomers or lodgers.  A "boarder," "roomer" or "lodger" residing  with  a  family  shall  mean  a  person  living  within  the household who pays a  consideration for such residence and does not occupy such  space  within  the household as an incident of employment therein.    6.  A  "private  dwelling"  is  any building or structure designed and  occupied exclusively  for  residence  purposes  by  not  more  than  two  families.    A  building  designed  for and occupied exclusively by one family is a  "single-family private dwelling."    A building designed for and occupied exclusively by two families is  a  "two-family private dwelling."    Private  dwellings  shall  also  be  deemed  to  include  a  series of  one-family or two-family dwelling  units  each  of  which  faces  or  is  accessible  to  a legal street or public thoroughfare provided that each  such dwelling unit is equipped as a  separate  dwelling  unit  with  all  essential services, and also provided that each such unit is arranged so  that it may be approved as a legal one-family or two-family dwelling.    7. A "multiple dwelling" is a dwelling which is either rented, leased,  let  or  hired  out,  to be occupied, or is occupied as the residence or  home of three or more families living independently of  each  other.  On  and after July first, nineteen hundred fifty-five, a "multiple dwelling"  shall  also include residential quarters for members or personnel of any  hospital staff which are not located in any building used primarily  for  hospital  use  provided,  however,  that any building which was erected,  altered or converted prior to July first, nineteen  hundred  fifty-five,  to  be  occupied  by such members or personnel or is so occupied on such  date shall not be subject to the requirements of this  chapter  only  so  long  as  it  continues  to be so occupied provided there are local laws  applicable to such building and such building is in compliance with such  local laws. A "multiple dwelling" shall  not  be  deemed  to  include  a  hospital,  convent,  monastery,  asylum  or  public  institution,  or  a  fireproof building used wholly for commercial purposes  except  for  not  more  than  one  janitor's  apartment  and  not  more than one penthouse  occupied by not more than two families. For the purposes of this chapter  "multiple dwellings" are divided into two classes: "class A" and  "class  B."    8.  a.  A  "class  A" multiple dwelling is a multiple dwelling that is  occupied for permanent residence  purposes.  This  class  shall  include  tenements,   flat   houses,  maisonette  apartments,  apartment  houses,  apartment  hotels,  bachelor  apartments,  studio   apartments,   duplex  apartments,  kitchenette  apartments,  garden-type  maisonette  dwelling  projects, and all other  multiple  dwellings  except  class  B  multipledwellings.  A class A multiple dwelling shall only be used for permanent  residence purposes. For the  purposes  of  this  definition,  "permanent  residence purposes" shall consist of occupancy of a dwelling unit by the  same  natural person or family for thirty consecutive days or more and a  person or family so occupying a  dwelling  unit  shall  be  referred  to  herein  as  the permanent occupants of such dwelling unit. The following  uses of a dwelling unit by the permanent occupants thereof shall not  be  deemed  to  be inconsistent with the occupancy of such dwelling unit for  permanent residence purposes:    (1) (A)  occupancy  of  such  dwelling  unit  for  fewer  than  thirty  consecutive days by other natural persons living within the household of  the  permanent occupant such as house guests or lawful boarders, roomers  or lodgers; or    (B) incidental and occasional occupancy  of  such  dwelling  unit  for  fewer  than  thirty  consecutive  days by other natural persons when the  permanent occupants are temporarily absent for personal reasons such  as  vacation  or  medical  treatment,  provided  that  there  is no monetary  compensation paid to the permanent occupants for such occupancy.    (2)  In  a  class  A  multiple  dwelling  owned   by   an   accredited  not-for-profit  college  or  university  or  leased by such a college or  university under a net lease for a term of forty-nine years or more, the  use of designated dwelling units for occupancy  for  fewer  than  thirty  consecutive  days  shall  not be inconsistent with the occupancy of such  multiple dwelling for permanent residence purposes if:    (A) No more than five percent of the dwelling units in  such  multiple  dwelling  but  not  less than one dwelling unit, are designated for such  use and the designation of a unit  once  made  may  not  be  changed  to  another unit;    (B) A list of the designated dwelling units certified by an authorized  representative  of  the college or university is kept on the premises by  the owner or net lessee and made available upon request  for  inspection  by the department or the fire department of such city;    (C)  Only designated dwelling units on the certified list are used for  occupancy for fewer than thirty consecutive days and only by (i) natural  persons, other than persons whose only relationship with the college  or  university  is  as  a  student,  for  whom the college or university has  undertaken to provide housing accommodations such as visiting professors  and academics, graduate students with research or teaching  fellowships,  researchers  and  persons  presenting  academic papers, interviewing for  positions of employment  or  having  other  similar  business  with  the  college  or  university,  or  (ii)  natural  persons for whom a hospital  affiliated with such college or university  has  undertaken  to  provide  housing  accommodations  such  as  patients,  patients'  families and/or  accompanying escorts, medical professionals and  healthcare  consultants  or persons having other similar business with such hospital. A log shall  be maintained on the premises of the names and addresses of such persons  and the duration and reason for their stay. Such log shall be accessible  upon request for inspection by the department and the fire department of  such municipality;    (D) No rent or other payment is collected for such occupancy; and    (E)  The  fire  department  of such city shall require the filing of a  fire safety plan or other appropriate fire safety procedure.    b.  A  "garden-type  maisonette  dwelling  project"  is  a  series  of  attached, detached or semi-detached dwelling units which are provided as  a  group  collectively  with  all  essential  services  such as, but not  limited to, water supply and house sewers, and which units  are  located  on  a  site  or  plot  not less than twenty thousand square feet in area  under common ownership and erected under plans filed with the departmenton or after April eighteenth, nineteen  hundred  fifty-four,  and  which  units  together  and  in  their  aggregate  are  arranged or designed to  provide three or more apartments.    9.  A  "class  B"  multiple  dwelling  is a multiple dwelling which is  occupied, as a rule transiently, as the more or less temporary abode  of  individuals or families who are lodged with or without meals. This class  shall  include  hotels, lodging houses, rooming houses, boarding houses,  boarding schools, furnished room houses, lodgings, club houses,  college  and  school  dormitories and dwellings designed as private dwellings but  occupied by one or two families with five or  more  transient  boarders,  roomers or lodgers in one household.    10.  A  "converted  dwelling"  is  a dwelling (a) erected before April  eighteenth, nineteen hundred twenty-nine, to be occupied by one  or  two  families living independently of each other and subsequently occupied as  a  multiple  dwelling, or (b) a dwelling three stories or less in height  erected after April eighteenth,  nineteen  hundred  twenty-nine,  to  be  occupied  by  one or two families living independently of each other and  subsequently occupied by not more than three families  in  all,  with  a  maximum  occupancy of two families on each floor in a two story building  and one family on each floor in a three story  building,  in  compliance  with  the  provisions  of article six of this chapter, including section  one hundred seventy-a of said article. A converted dwelling occupied  as  a class A multiple dwelling is a class A converted dwelling; every other  converted dwelling is a class B converted dwelling.    11.  A "tenement" is any building or structure or any portion thereof,  erected before April eighteenth, nineteen hundred twenty-nine, which  is  occupied,  wholly or in part, as the residence of three families or more  living independently of each other and  doing  their  cooking  upon  the  premises,  and  includes  apartment  houses,  flat  houses and all other  houses so erected and occupied, except that  a  tenement  shall  not  be  deemed  to  include  any  converted dwelling. An "old-law tenement" is a  tenement existing  before  April  twelfth,  nineteen  hundred  one,  and  recorded  as  such  in  the department before April eighteenth, nineteen  hundred twenty-nine, except that it shall not be deemed to  include  any  converted dwelling.    12. A "hotel" is an inn having thirty or more sleeping rooms.    13.  A  "rooming  house"  or  a  "furnished  room house" is a multiple  dwelling, other than a hotel, having less than thirty sleeping rooms and  in which persons either individually or as families are housed for  hire  or  otherwise  with  or  without  meals.  An  inn  with less than thirty  sleeping rooms is a rooming house.    14. A "lodging house" is a multiple dwelling, other than  a  hotel,  a  rooming house or a furnished room house, in which persons are housed for  hire  for  a  single  night, or for less than a week at one time, or any  part of which is let for any person to sleep in for any term less than a  week.    15. An "apartment" is that part of a multiple dwelling  consisting  of  one  or  more  rooms containing at least one bathroom and arranged to be  occupied by the members of a family, which room or rooms  are  separated  and set apart from all other rooms within a multiple dwelling.    16.  "Single room occupancy" is the occupancy by one or two persons of  a single room, or of two  or  more  rooms  which  are  joined  together,  separated  from  all  other  rooms  within  an  apartment  in a multiple  dwelling, so that the occupant or occupants  thereof  reside  separately  and  independently  of  the  other  occupant  or  occupants  of the same  apartment. When a class A multiple dwelling is used wholly  or  in  part  for single room occupancy, it remains a class A multiple dwelling.17.  A  "public  hall"  is  a  hall,  corridor  or passageway within a  building but outside of all apartments and suites of  private  rooms.  A  "public  vestibule"  is  a corridor, not within an apartment or suite of  private rooms, providing access to a stair or  elevator  and  not  wider  than seven feet nor longer than twice the width of the stair or elevator  shafts  opening  upon it. A "public room" or "public part" of a dwelling  is a space used in common by the occupants of two or more apartments  or  rooms,  or by persons who are not tenants, or exclusively for mechanical  equipment of such dwelling or for storage purposes.    18. A "living room" is a room which  is  not  a  public  hall,  public  vestibule,  public  room  or other public part of a dwelling. Every room  used for sleeping purposes shall be deemed a living  room.  Dining  bays  and  dinettes  fifty-five  square  feet  or  less in floor area, foyers,  water-closet compartments, bathrooms, cooking spaces  less  than  eighty  square  feet  in  area,  and  halls,  corridors and passageways entirely  within an apartment or suite of rooms shall not be deemed living  rooms.  "Floor  space"  shall  mean the clear area of the floor contained within  the partitions or walls  enclosing  any  room,  space,  foyer,  hall  or  passageways of any dwelling.    19.  A "dining bay," "dining recess" or "dinette" is a recess used for  dining purposes off a living room, foyer or kitchen.    20. A "foyer" is a space within an apartment or suite of rooms used as  an entrance hall directly from a public hall.    21. A "dormitory" in a lodging house is any place  used  for  sleeping  purposes.  A  "cubicle"  is  a  small  partially enclosed sleeping space  within a dormitory with or without a window to the outer air.    22. "Premises" shall mean land and improvements  or  appurtenances  or  any part thereof.    23. "Structure" shall mean a building or construction of any kind.    24.  "Alteration,"  as  applied to a building or structure, shall mean  any change or rearrangement in the structural parts  or  in  the  egress  facilities  of  any  such  building  or  structure,  or  any enlargement  thereof, whether by extension on any side or by any increase in  height,  or  the  moving  of  such  building  or  structure  from one location or  position to another.    25. A "fireproof multiple dwelling" is one  in  which  the  walls  and  other  structural  members  are of incombustible materials or assemblies  meeting all of the requirements of the building code and  with  standard  fire-resistive  ratings  of  not  less than one of the following sets of  requirements:    a. For any multiple dwelling more than one  hundred  feet  in  height,  four  hours  for  fire  walls,  party  walls,  piers,  columns, interior  structural members which carry walls, girders carrying columns, and  for  exterior  walls  other  than panel walls; three hours for other girders,  fire partitions, floors including their beams and girders, beams, roofs,  floor fillings, and stairway enclosures;  and  two  hours  for  exterior  panel walls.    b.  For  any multiple dwelling one hundred feet or less in height, the  provisions of preceding paragraph a shall apply, except that the minimum  requirements shall be three hours for exterior walls  other  than  panel  walls,  which  shall  be two hours; two hours for protection of interior  columns; one and one-half hours for roofs  and  for  floors  and  beams;  provided, however, that for a multiple dwelling three stories or less in  height, the requirement for all floors and the roof shall be one hour.    26. The term "fireproof," as applied to a part or parts of a building,  means  such  part  or  parts  are  made  of incombustible materials with  standard fire-resistive ratings not less than  those  required  for  the  corresponding part or parts of a fireproof dwelling.27.  A  "non-fireproof  dwelling"  is  one  which  does  not  meet the  requirements for a fireproof dwelling.    28.  A  "frame  dwelling" is a dwelling of which the exterior walls or  any structural parts of such walls are of wood. A dwelling  which  would  not  otherwise  be a frame dwelling shall not be deemed a frame dwelling  by reason of the existence on such  dwelling  of  frame  oriel,  bay  or  dormer  windows,  frame  porches  not  more than one story in height, or  frame extensions not more than one story in height and fifty-nine square  feet in area if such windows, porches or extensions were  erected  prior  to April thirteenth, nineteen hundred forty.    29.  The  term  "fire-retarded,"  as  applied  to a part or parts of a  building, means such part or parts are either covered  with  metal  lath  plastered  with  two  or  more  coats  of  mortar or otherwise protected  against fire in a manner approved by the department  with  materials  of  standard fire-resistive ratings of at least one hour. Fireproofing shall  always be accepted as meeting any requirement for fire-retarding.    30.  "Fire-stopping" means the closing of all concealed draft openings  to form an effectual fire barrier at floors,  ceilings  and  roofs  with  brick,  concrete,  gypsum, asbestos, mineral wool, rock wool, metal lath  with  cement  or  gypsum  plaster,  or  other   approved   incombustible  materials.    31.  A "lot" is a parcel or plot of ground which is or may be occupied  wholly or in part by  a  dwelling,  including  the  spaces  occupied  by  accessory or other structures and any open or unoccupied spaces thereon,  but not including any part of an abutting public street or thoroughfare.    a.  A  "corner lot" is a lot of which at least two adjacent sides abut  for their full length upon streets or public places not less than  forty  feet  in  width.  That  portion of a corner lot in excess of one hundred  feet from any street on which the  lot  abuts  shall  be  considered  an  interior lot.    An "interior lot" is a lot which is neither a corner lot nor a through  lot.    b.  The  "front"  of  a  lot  is that boundary line which abuts on the  street, or, if there be more than one street  abutting,  on  the  street  designated  by  the  owner. The "rear" of a lot is the side opposite the  front.    c. The "depth" of a lot is the distance from the front of the  lot  to  the extreme rear line of the lot. In the case of an irregular-shaped lot  the mean depth shall be taken.    d.  A  "through  lot"  is  a lot running through from street to street  whose front and rear lines abut for their entire lengths upon streets or  open public places; provided, however, that when either  of  said  lines  exceeds the other in length by more than twenty per centum, that part of  the  lot  contiguous  to  the  excess length of the longer line shall be  deemed an interior lot. The department may designate which part  of  the  longer   line   is   the  excess  in  length  and  make  any  reasonable  interpretation of the part of the lot to be regarded  as  contiguous  to  such excess.    e.  Lots  or portions of lots shall be deemed "back to back" when they  are on opposite sides of the same part of a rear line common to both and  the opposite street lines on which the lots front are parallel with each  other or make an angle with each  other  of  not  more  than  forty-five  degrees.    32.  A  "rear  yard"  is an open space on the same lot with a dwelling  between the extreme rear line of the lot and the extreme  rear  wall  of  the  dwelling.  A "side yard" is a continuous open space on the same lot  with a dwelling between the wall of a dwelling and a  line  of  the  lot  from  the  street  to a rear yard or rear line of a lot. A "court" is anopen space other than a side  or  rear  yard,  on  the  same  lot  as  a  dwelling.  A court not extending to the street or rear yard is an "inner  court". A court extending to the  street  or  rear  yard  is  an  "outer  court".    32-a.  "A  rear yard equivalent" is an open area which may be required  on a through lot as an alternative to a required rear yard.    33. The "curb level", for the purpose of measuring the height  of  any  portion  of  a  building,  is the level of the curb at the center of the  front of the building; except that where a building faces on  more  than  one  street, the curb level is the average of the levels of the curbs at  the center of each front. Where no curb elevation has  been  established  the average elevation of the final grade adjoining all exterior walls of  a  building,  calculated from grade elevations taken at intervals of ten  feet around the exterior walls of the building, shall be considered  the  curb  level, unless the city engineer shall establish such curb level or  its equivalent.    34. A "street wall" of a building, at any level, is the  wall  of  the  building nearest to a street line abutting the property.    35.  a.  The  "height" of a dwelling is the vertical distance from the  curb level to the level of the highest point of the roof  beams;  except  that, in the case of pitched roofs, it is the vertical distance from the  curb  level  to  the  mean  height  level of the gable or roof above the  vertical street wall. When  no  roof  beams  exist  or  when  there  are  structures  wholly or partly above the roof, the height shall, except as  otherwise expressly provided, be measured from the  curb  level  to  the  level  of  the  highest  point  of any such structure; except that where  every part of the building is set back more than twenty-five feet from a  street line, the  height  shall  be  measured  from  the  average  grade  elevation  calculated from the final grade elevations taken at intervals  of ten feet around the exterior walls of the building.    b. Except as otherwise provided in section  two  hundred  eleven,  the  following superstructure shall not be considered in measuring the height  of  a  dwelling;  parapet walls or guard railings, other superstructures  twelve feet or less in height and occupying fifteen per centum  or  less  of  the  area  of  the  roof, elevator enclosures thirty feet or less in  height used solely for elevator purposes, enclosures fifty feet or  less  in  height  used  solely  for  tanks, cooling towers or other mechanical  equipment; and, when  approved  by  the  department,  pergolas,  spires,  chimneys, other ornamental treatments, roof gardens and playgrounds.    c.  When  on  the main roof of any fireproof multiple dwelling erected  after April eighteenth, nineteen hundred twenty-nine, in  which  one  or  more  passenger  elevators are operated, a penthouse dwelling is erected  the height of which does not exceed twelve feet and the walls  of  which  are  set back as provided in this paragraph, the height of such multiple  dwelling shall be measured as though no such penthouse had been  erected  thereon.  Such  penthouse walls shall be set back from the outer face of  the front parapet wall at least five feet, from the outer  face  of  the  yard  parapet  wall  at least ten feet, and from the inner face of every  other parapet wall at least three  feet;  except  that  the  setback  so  required  from  any  parapet  wall  facing  any  court or yard or recess  therefrom but not facing any street may be reduced  one-third  for  each  ten  per  centum  by  which  the  area of such court or yard exceeds the  required minimum area thereof at the highest level of such parapet wall,  and the setback so required from any parapet wall facing any street  may  be  reduced  one  foot  for each foot that such parapet wall is set back  from the building line established by law at the highest level  of  such  parapet  wall,  provided  that in the opinion of the department safe and  sufficient passage is provided to and from every part of the main  roof.Any penthouse wall which may be flush with the inner face of any parapet  wall may be flush with the outer face thereof.    d.  If  a  rear  multiple  dwelling is erected after April eighteenth,  nineteen hundred twenty-nine, on  the  same  lot  as  a  front  multiple  dwelling,  and  the  depth of the yard of the front multiple dwelling is  more than sixty feet and the lowest point of such yard is below the curb  level and below the floor of a cellar of the front multiple dwelling  or  of  the  lowest  story  thereof if there is no cellar, the height of the  rear multiple dwelling shall be measured from such lowest point  instead  of from the curb level.    36.  A  "story" is a space between the level of one finished floor and  the level of the next higher finished floor, or, if the  top  story,  of  the space between the level of the highest finished floor and the top of  the highest roof beams, or, if the first story, of the space between the  level  of the finished floor and the finished ceiling immediately above.  For the purpose of measuring height by  stories  in  multiple  dwellings  erected  after  April  eighteenth,  nineteen  hundred  twenty-nine,  one  additional story shall be added for each twelve feet or fraction thereof  that the first story exceeds fifteen feet in height, and for each twelve  feet or fraction thereof that any story above the  first  story  exceeds  twelve feet in height.    37.  A  "cellar"  in  a dwelling is an enclosed space having more than  one-half of its height below the curb level;  except  that  where  every  part  of  the  building  is  set  back more than twenty-five feet from a  street line, the height shall  be  measured  from  the  adjoining  grade  elevations  calculated from final grade elevations taken at intervals of  ten feet around the exterior walls of the building. A cellar  shall  not  be counted as a story.    38.  A "basement" is a story partly below the curb level but having at  least one-half of its height above the curb  level;  except  that  where  every part of the building is set back more than twenty-five feet from a  street  line,  the  height  shall  be  measured from the adjoining grade  elevations calculated from final grade elevations taken at intervals  of  ten  feet around the exterior walls of the building. A basement shall be  counted as  a  story  in  determining  height,  except  as  provided  in  paragraph e of subdivision six of section one hundred two.    39.  A  "section" of a multiple dwelling is a part thereof, other than  an apartment or suite of rooms, separated as a unit  from  the  rest  of  such dwelling by fireproof construction.    40.  A  "shaft"  is  an  enclosed  space extending through one or more  stories of a building connecting a series of openings  therein,  or  any  story or stories and the roof, and includes exterior and interior shafts  whether for air, light, elevator, dumbwaiter or any other purpose.    41.  A  "stair"  is  a  flight  or  flights of steps together with any  landings and parts of public halls through which it is necessary to pass  in going from one level thereof to another.    42. a. A "fire-tower" is a  fireproof  stair,  enclosed  in  fireproof  walls, without access to the building from which it affords egress other  than by a fireproof self-closing door opening on a communicating balcony  or other outside platform at each floor level.    b.  A  "fire-stair" is a fireproof stair, enclosed in fireproof walls,  within the body of the building which it serves, to which access may  be  had only through self-closing fireproof doors.    c.  A  "fire-escape"  is a combination of outside balconies and stairs  providing an unobstructed means of egress from  rooms  or  spaces  in  a  building.    d.  A  "panel  wall"  is  a  non-bearing wall in skeleton construction  erected between columns or piers and wholly supported at each story.43. Window dimensions shall always be taken between stop-beads or,  if  there  are  no  stop-beads, between the sides, head and sill of the sash  opening.    44. The term "owner" shall mean and include the owner or owners of the  freehold of the premises or lesser estate therein, a mortgagee or vendee  in  possession,  assignee of rents, receiver, executor, trustee, lessee,  agent, or any other person, firm or corporation, directly or  indirectly  in  control  of a dwelling. Whenever a multiple dwelling shall have been  declared a public nuisance to any extent  pursuant  to  paragraph  b  of  subdivision  one  of section three hundred nine of this chapter and such  declaration shall have been filed as therein provided, the term  "owner"  shall  be deemed to include, in addition to those mentioned hereinabove,  all the officers, directors and persons having an interest in more  than  ten  per cent of the issued and outstanding stock of the owner as herein  defined, as holder or beneficial owner  thereof,  if  such  owner  be  a  corporation  other than a banking organization as defined in section two  of the banking law, a national banking association,  a  federal  savings  and loan association, The Mortgage Facilities Corporation, Savings Banks  Life  Insurance Fund, The Savings Banks Retirement System, an authorized  insurer as defined in section one hundred seven of the insurance law, or  a trust company or other corporation organized under the  laws  of  this  state all the capital stock of which is owned by at least twenty savings  banks  or  a subsidiary corporation all of the capital stock of which is  owned by such trust company or other corporation.

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Mdw > Article-1 > 4

§  4.  Definitions. Certain words and terms when used in this chapter,  unless the context or subject matter requires otherwise, are defined  as  follows:    1. Wherever the word or words "occupied," "is occupied," "used" or "is  used"  appear,  such  word or words shall be construed as if followed by  the words "or is intended, arranged or designed to be used or occupied."    2. The word "shall" is always mandatory.    3. The term "department" shall mean the department,  bureau,  division  or other agency charged with the enforcement of this chapter.    4.  A "dwelling" is any building or structure or portion thereof which  is occupied in whole or in part as the home, residence or sleeping place  of one or more human beings.    5. A "family" is either a person occupying a dwelling and  maintaining  a  household,  with  not more than four boarders, roomers or lodgers, or  two  or  more  persons  occupying  a  dwelling,  living   together   and  maintaining  a  common  household,  with  not  more  than four boarders,  roomers or lodgers.  A "boarder," "roomer" or "lodger" residing  with  a  family  shall  mean  a  person  living  within  the household who pays a  consideration for such residence and does not occupy such  space  within  the household as an incident of employment therein.    6.  A  "private  dwelling"  is  any building or structure designed and  occupied exclusively  for  residence  purposes  by  not  more  than  two  families.    A  building  designed  for and occupied exclusively by one family is a  "single-family private dwelling."    A building designed for and occupied exclusively by two families is  a  "two-family private dwelling."    Private  dwellings  shall  also  be  deemed  to  include  a  series of  one-family or two-family dwelling  units  each  of  which  faces  or  is  accessible  to  a legal street or public thoroughfare provided that each  such dwelling unit is equipped as a  separate  dwelling  unit  with  all  essential services, and also provided that each such unit is arranged so  that it may be approved as a legal one-family or two-family dwelling.    7. A "multiple dwelling" is a dwelling which is either rented, leased,  let  or  hired  out,  to be occupied, or is occupied as the residence or  home of three or more families living independently of  each  other.  On  and after July first, nineteen hundred fifty-five, a "multiple dwelling"  shall  also include residential quarters for members or personnel of any  hospital staff which are not located in any building used primarily  for  hospital  use  provided,  however,  that any building which was erected,  altered or converted prior to July first, nineteen  hundred  fifty-five,  to  be  occupied  by such members or personnel or is so occupied on such  date shall not be subject to the requirements of this  chapter  only  so  long  as  it  continues  to be so occupied provided there are local laws  applicable to such building and such building is in compliance with such  local laws. A "multiple dwelling" shall  not  be  deemed  to  include  a  hospital,  convent,  monastery,  asylum  or  public  institution,  or  a  fireproof building used wholly for commercial purposes  except  for  not  more  than  one  janitor's  apartment  and  not  more than one penthouse  occupied by not more than two families. For the purposes of this chapter  "multiple dwellings" are divided into two classes: "class A" and  "class  B."    8.  a.  A  "class  A" multiple dwelling is a multiple dwelling that is  occupied for permanent residence  purposes.  This  class  shall  include  tenements,   flat   houses,  maisonette  apartments,  apartment  houses,  apartment  hotels,  bachelor  apartments,  studio   apartments,   duplex  apartments,  kitchenette  apartments,  garden-type  maisonette  dwelling  projects, and all other  multiple  dwellings  except  class  B  multipledwellings.  A class A multiple dwelling shall only be used for permanent  residence purposes. For the  purposes  of  this  definition,  "permanent  residence purposes" shall consist of occupancy of a dwelling unit by the  same  natural person or family for thirty consecutive days or more and a  person or family so occupying a  dwelling  unit  shall  be  referred  to  herein  as  the permanent occupants of such dwelling unit. The following  uses of a dwelling unit by the permanent occupants thereof shall not  be  deemed  to  be inconsistent with the occupancy of such dwelling unit for  permanent residence purposes:    (1) (A)  occupancy  of  such  dwelling  unit  for  fewer  than  thirty  consecutive days by other natural persons living within the household of  the  permanent occupant such as house guests or lawful boarders, roomers  or lodgers; or    (B) incidental and occasional occupancy  of  such  dwelling  unit  for  fewer  than  thirty  consecutive  days by other natural persons when the  permanent occupants are temporarily absent for personal reasons such  as  vacation  or  medical  treatment,  provided  that  there  is no monetary  compensation paid to the permanent occupants for such occupancy.    (2)  In  a  class  A  multiple  dwelling  owned   by   an   accredited  not-for-profit  college  or  university  or  leased by such a college or  university under a net lease for a term of forty-nine years or more, the  use of designated dwelling units for occupancy  for  fewer  than  thirty  consecutive  days  shall  not be inconsistent with the occupancy of such  multiple dwelling for permanent residence purposes if:    (A) No more than five percent of the dwelling units in  such  multiple  dwelling  but  not  less than one dwelling unit, are designated for such  use and the designation of a unit  once  made  may  not  be  changed  to  another unit;    (B) A list of the designated dwelling units certified by an authorized  representative  of  the college or university is kept on the premises by  the owner or net lessee and made available upon request  for  inspection  by the department or the fire department of such city;    (C)  Only designated dwelling units on the certified list are used for  occupancy for fewer than thirty consecutive days and only by (i) natural  persons, other than persons whose only relationship with the college  or  university  is  as  a  student,  for  whom the college or university has  undertaken to provide housing accommodations such as visiting professors  and academics, graduate students with research or teaching  fellowships,  researchers  and  persons  presenting  academic papers, interviewing for  positions of employment  or  having  other  similar  business  with  the  college  or  university,  or  (ii)  natural  persons for whom a hospital  affiliated with such college or university  has  undertaken  to  provide  housing  accommodations  such  as  patients,  patients'  families and/or  accompanying escorts, medical professionals and  healthcare  consultants  or persons having other similar business with such hospital. A log shall  be maintained on the premises of the names and addresses of such persons  and the duration and reason for their stay. Such log shall be accessible  upon request for inspection by the department and the fire department of  such municipality;    (D) No rent or other payment is collected for such occupancy; and    (E)  The  fire  department  of such city shall require the filing of a  fire safety plan or other appropriate fire safety procedure.    b.  A  "garden-type  maisonette  dwelling  project"  is  a  series  of  attached, detached or semi-detached dwelling units which are provided as  a  group  collectively  with  all  essential  services  such as, but not  limited to, water supply and house sewers, and which units  are  located  on  a  site  or  plot  not less than twenty thousand square feet in area  under common ownership and erected under plans filed with the departmenton or after April eighteenth, nineteen  hundred  fifty-four,  and  which  units  together  and  in  their  aggregate  are  arranged or designed to  provide three or more apartments.    9.  A  "class  B"  multiple  dwelling  is a multiple dwelling which is  occupied, as a rule transiently, as the more or less temporary abode  of  individuals or families who are lodged with or without meals. This class  shall  include  hotels, lodging houses, rooming houses, boarding houses,  boarding schools, furnished room houses, lodgings, club houses,  college  and  school  dormitories and dwellings designed as private dwellings but  occupied by one or two families with five or  more  transient  boarders,  roomers or lodgers in one household.    10.  A  "converted  dwelling"  is  a dwelling (a) erected before April  eighteenth, nineteen hundred twenty-nine, to be occupied by one  or  two  families living independently of each other and subsequently occupied as  a  multiple  dwelling, or (b) a dwelling three stories or less in height  erected after April eighteenth,  nineteen  hundred  twenty-nine,  to  be  occupied  by  one or two families living independently of each other and  subsequently occupied by not more than three families  in  all,  with  a  maximum  occupancy of two families on each floor in a two story building  and one family on each floor in a three story  building,  in  compliance  with  the  provisions  of article six of this chapter, including section  one hundred seventy-a of said article. A converted dwelling occupied  as  a class A multiple dwelling is a class A converted dwelling; every other  converted dwelling is a class B converted dwelling.    11.  A "tenement" is any building or structure or any portion thereof,  erected before April eighteenth, nineteen hundred twenty-nine, which  is  occupied,  wholly or in part, as the residence of three families or more  living independently of each other and  doing  their  cooking  upon  the  premises,  and  includes  apartment  houses,  flat  houses and all other  houses so erected and occupied, except that  a  tenement  shall  not  be  deemed  to  include  any  converted dwelling. An "old-law tenement" is a  tenement existing  before  April  twelfth,  nineteen  hundred  one,  and  recorded  as  such  in  the department before April eighteenth, nineteen  hundred twenty-nine, except that it shall not be deemed to  include  any  converted dwelling.    12. A "hotel" is an inn having thirty or more sleeping rooms.    13.  A  "rooming  house"  or  a  "furnished  room house" is a multiple  dwelling, other than a hotel, having less than thirty sleeping rooms and  in which persons either individually or as families are housed for  hire  or  otherwise  with  or  without  meals.  An  inn  with less than thirty  sleeping rooms is a rooming house.    14. A "lodging house" is a multiple dwelling, other than  a  hotel,  a  rooming house or a furnished room house, in which persons are housed for  hire  for  a  single  night, or for less than a week at one time, or any  part of which is let for any person to sleep in for any term less than a  week.    15. An "apartment" is that part of a multiple dwelling  consisting  of  one  or  more  rooms containing at least one bathroom and arranged to be  occupied by the members of a family, which room or rooms  are  separated  and set apart from all other rooms within a multiple dwelling.    16.  "Single room occupancy" is the occupancy by one or two persons of  a single room, or of two  or  more  rooms  which  are  joined  together,  separated  from  all  other  rooms  within  an  apartment  in a multiple  dwelling, so that the occupant or occupants  thereof  reside  separately  and  independently  of  the  other  occupant  or  occupants  of the same  apartment. When a class A multiple dwelling is used wholly  or  in  part  for single room occupancy, it remains a class A multiple dwelling.17.  A  "public  hall"  is  a  hall,  corridor  or passageway within a  building but outside of all apartments and suites of  private  rooms.  A  "public  vestibule"  is  a corridor, not within an apartment or suite of  private rooms, providing access to a stair or  elevator  and  not  wider  than seven feet nor longer than twice the width of the stair or elevator  shafts  opening  upon it. A "public room" or "public part" of a dwelling  is a space used in common by the occupants of two or more apartments  or  rooms,  or by persons who are not tenants, or exclusively for mechanical  equipment of such dwelling or for storage purposes.    18. A "living room" is a room which  is  not  a  public  hall,  public  vestibule,  public  room  or other public part of a dwelling. Every room  used for sleeping purposes shall be deemed a living  room.  Dining  bays  and  dinettes  fifty-five  square  feet  or  less in floor area, foyers,  water-closet compartments, bathrooms, cooking spaces  less  than  eighty  square  feet  in  area,  and  halls,  corridors and passageways entirely  within an apartment or suite of rooms shall not be deemed living  rooms.  "Floor  space"  shall  mean the clear area of the floor contained within  the partitions or walls  enclosing  any  room,  space,  foyer,  hall  or  passageways of any dwelling.    19.  A "dining bay," "dining recess" or "dinette" is a recess used for  dining purposes off a living room, foyer or kitchen.    20. A "foyer" is a space within an apartment or suite of rooms used as  an entrance hall directly from a public hall.    21. A "dormitory" in a lodging house is any place  used  for  sleeping  purposes.  A  "cubicle"  is  a  small  partially enclosed sleeping space  within a dormitory with or without a window to the outer air.    22. "Premises" shall mean land and improvements  or  appurtenances  or  any part thereof.    23. "Structure" shall mean a building or construction of any kind.    24.  "Alteration,"  as  applied to a building or structure, shall mean  any change or rearrangement in the structural parts  or  in  the  egress  facilities  of  any  such  building  or  structure,  or  any enlargement  thereof, whether by extension on any side or by any increase in  height,  or  the  moving  of  such  building  or  structure  from one location or  position to another.    25. A "fireproof multiple dwelling" is one  in  which  the  walls  and  other  structural  members  are of incombustible materials or assemblies  meeting all of the requirements of the building code and  with  standard  fire-resistive  ratings  of  not  less than one of the following sets of  requirements:    a. For any multiple dwelling more than one  hundred  feet  in  height,  four  hours  for  fire  walls,  party  walls,  piers,  columns, interior  structural members which carry walls, girders carrying columns, and  for  exterior  walls  other  than panel walls; three hours for other girders,  fire partitions, floors including their beams and girders, beams, roofs,  floor fillings, and stairway enclosures;  and  two  hours  for  exterior  panel walls.    b.  For  any multiple dwelling one hundred feet or less in height, the  provisions of preceding paragraph a shall apply, except that the minimum  requirements shall be three hours for exterior walls  other  than  panel  walls,  which  shall  be two hours; two hours for protection of interior  columns; one and one-half hours for roofs  and  for  floors  and  beams;  provided, however, that for a multiple dwelling three stories or less in  height, the requirement for all floors and the roof shall be one hour.    26. The term "fireproof," as applied to a part or parts of a building,  means  such  part  or  parts  are  made  of incombustible materials with  standard fire-resistive ratings not less than  those  required  for  the  corresponding part or parts of a fireproof dwelling.27.  A  "non-fireproof  dwelling"  is  one  which  does  not  meet the  requirements for a fireproof dwelling.    28.  A  "frame  dwelling" is a dwelling of which the exterior walls or  any structural parts of such walls are of wood. A dwelling  which  would  not  otherwise  be a frame dwelling shall not be deemed a frame dwelling  by reason of the existence on such  dwelling  of  frame  oriel,  bay  or  dormer  windows,  frame  porches  not  more than one story in height, or  frame extensions not more than one story in height and fifty-nine square  feet in area if such windows, porches or extensions were  erected  prior  to April thirteenth, nineteen hundred forty.    29.  The  term  "fire-retarded,"  as  applied  to a part or parts of a  building, means such part or parts are either covered  with  metal  lath  plastered  with  two  or  more  coats  of  mortar or otherwise protected  against fire in a manner approved by the department  with  materials  of  standard fire-resistive ratings of at least one hour. Fireproofing shall  always be accepted as meeting any requirement for fire-retarding.    30.  "Fire-stopping" means the closing of all concealed draft openings  to form an effectual fire barrier at floors,  ceilings  and  roofs  with  brick,  concrete,  gypsum, asbestos, mineral wool, rock wool, metal lath  with  cement  or  gypsum  plaster,  or  other   approved   incombustible  materials.    31.  A "lot" is a parcel or plot of ground which is or may be occupied  wholly or in part by  a  dwelling,  including  the  spaces  occupied  by  accessory or other structures and any open or unoccupied spaces thereon,  but not including any part of an abutting public street or thoroughfare.    a.  A  "corner lot" is a lot of which at least two adjacent sides abut  for their full length upon streets or public places not less than  forty  feet  in  width.  That  portion of a corner lot in excess of one hundred  feet from any street on which the  lot  abuts  shall  be  considered  an  interior lot.    An "interior lot" is a lot which is neither a corner lot nor a through  lot.    b.  The  "front"  of  a  lot  is that boundary line which abuts on the  street, or, if there be more than one street  abutting,  on  the  street  designated  by  the  owner. The "rear" of a lot is the side opposite the  front.    c. The "depth" of a lot is the distance from the front of the  lot  to  the extreme rear line of the lot. In the case of an irregular-shaped lot  the mean depth shall be taken.    d.  A  "through  lot"  is  a lot running through from street to street  whose front and rear lines abut for their entire lengths upon streets or  open public places; provided, however, that when either  of  said  lines  exceeds the other in length by more than twenty per centum, that part of  the  lot  contiguous  to  the  excess length of the longer line shall be  deemed an interior lot. The department may designate which part  of  the  longer   line   is   the  excess  in  length  and  make  any  reasonable  interpretation of the part of the lot to be regarded  as  contiguous  to  such excess.    e.  Lots  or portions of lots shall be deemed "back to back" when they  are on opposite sides of the same part of a rear line common to both and  the opposite street lines on which the lots front are parallel with each  other or make an angle with each  other  of  not  more  than  forty-five  degrees.    32.  A  "rear  yard"  is an open space on the same lot with a dwelling  between the extreme rear line of the lot and the extreme  rear  wall  of  the  dwelling.  A "side yard" is a continuous open space on the same lot  with a dwelling between the wall of a dwelling and a  line  of  the  lot  from  the  street  to a rear yard or rear line of a lot. A "court" is anopen space other than a side  or  rear  yard,  on  the  same  lot  as  a  dwelling.  A court not extending to the street or rear yard is an "inner  court". A court extending to the  street  or  rear  yard  is  an  "outer  court".    32-a.  "A  rear yard equivalent" is an open area which may be required  on a through lot as an alternative to a required rear yard.    33. The "curb level", for the purpose of measuring the height  of  any  portion  of  a  building,  is the level of the curb at the center of the  front of the building; except that where a building faces on  more  than  one  street, the curb level is the average of the levels of the curbs at  the center of each front. Where no curb elevation has  been  established  the average elevation of the final grade adjoining all exterior walls of  a  building,  calculated from grade elevations taken at intervals of ten  feet around the exterior walls of the building, shall be considered  the  curb  level, unless the city engineer shall establish such curb level or  its equivalent.    34. A "street wall" of a building, at any level, is the  wall  of  the  building nearest to a street line abutting the property.    35.  a.  The  "height" of a dwelling is the vertical distance from the  curb level to the level of the highest point of the roof  beams;  except  that, in the case of pitched roofs, it is the vertical distance from the  curb  level  to  the  mean  height  level of the gable or roof above the  vertical street wall. When  no  roof  beams  exist  or  when  there  are  structures  wholly or partly above the roof, the height shall, except as  otherwise expressly provided, be measured from the  curb  level  to  the  level  of  the  highest  point  of any such structure; except that where  every part of the building is set back more than twenty-five feet from a  street line, the  height  shall  be  measured  from  the  average  grade  elevation  calculated from the final grade elevations taken at intervals  of ten feet around the exterior walls of the building.    b. Except as otherwise provided in section  two  hundred  eleven,  the  following superstructure shall not be considered in measuring the height  of  a  dwelling;  parapet walls or guard railings, other superstructures  twelve feet or less in height and occupying fifteen per centum  or  less  of  the  area  of  the  roof, elevator enclosures thirty feet or less in  height used solely for elevator purposes, enclosures fifty feet or  less  in  height  used  solely  for  tanks, cooling towers or other mechanical  equipment; and, when  approved  by  the  department,  pergolas,  spires,  chimneys, other ornamental treatments, roof gardens and playgrounds.    c.  When  on  the main roof of any fireproof multiple dwelling erected  after April eighteenth, nineteen hundred twenty-nine, in  which  one  or  more  passenger  elevators are operated, a penthouse dwelling is erected  the height of which does not exceed twelve feet and the walls  of  which  are  set back as provided in this paragraph, the height of such multiple  dwelling shall be measured as though no such penthouse had been  erected  thereon.  Such  penthouse walls shall be set back from the outer face of  the front parapet wall at least five feet, from the outer  face  of  the  yard  parapet  wall  at least ten feet, and from the inner face of every  other parapet wall at least three  feet;  except  that  the  setback  so  required  from  any  parapet  wall  facing  any  court or yard or recess  therefrom but not facing any street may be reduced  one-third  for  each  ten  per  centum  by  which  the  area of such court or yard exceeds the  required minimum area thereof at the highest level of such parapet wall,  and the setback so required from any parapet wall facing any street  may  be  reduced  one  foot  for each foot that such parapet wall is set back  from the building line established by law at the highest level  of  such  parapet  wall,  provided  that in the opinion of the department safe and  sufficient passage is provided to and from every part of the main  roof.Any penthouse wall which may be flush with the inner face of any parapet  wall may be flush with the outer face thereof.    d.  If  a  rear  multiple  dwelling is erected after April eighteenth,  nineteen hundred twenty-nine, on  the  same  lot  as  a  front  multiple  dwelling,  and  the  depth of the yard of the front multiple dwelling is  more than sixty feet and the lowest point of such yard is below the curb  level and below the floor of a cellar of the front multiple dwelling  or  of  the  lowest  story  thereof if there is no cellar, the height of the  rear multiple dwelling shall be measured from such lowest point  instead  of from the curb level.    36.  A  "story" is a space between the level of one finished floor and  the level of the next higher finished floor, or, if the  top  story,  of  the space between the level of the highest finished floor and the top of  the highest roof beams, or, if the first story, of the space between the  level  of the finished floor and the finished ceiling immediately above.  For the purpose of measuring height by  stories  in  multiple  dwellings  erected  after  April  eighteenth,  nineteen  hundred  twenty-nine,  one  additional story shall be added for each twelve feet or fraction thereof  that the first story exceeds fifteen feet in height, and for each twelve  feet or fraction thereof that any story above the  first  story  exceeds  twelve feet in height.    37.  A  "cellar"  in  a dwelling is an enclosed space having more than  one-half of its height below the curb level;  except  that  where  every  part  of  the  building  is  set  back more than twenty-five feet from a  street line, the height shall  be  measured  from  the  adjoining  grade  elevations  calculated from final grade elevations taken at intervals of  ten feet around the exterior walls of the building. A cellar  shall  not  be counted as a story.    38.  A "basement" is a story partly below the curb level but having at  least one-half of its height above the curb  level;  except  that  where  every part of the building is set back more than twenty-five feet from a  street  line,  the  height  shall  be  measured from the adjoining grade  elevations calculated from final grade elevations taken at intervals  of  ten  feet around the exterior walls of the building. A basement shall be  counted as  a  story  in  determining  height,  except  as  provided  in  paragraph e of subdivision six of section one hundred two.    39.  A  "section" of a multiple dwelling is a part thereof, other than  an apartment or suite of rooms, separated as a unit  from  the  rest  of  such dwelling by fireproof construction.    40.  A  "shaft"  is  an  enclosed  space extending through one or more  stories of a building connecting a series of openings  therein,  or  any  story or stories and the roof, and includes exterior and interior shafts  whether for air, light, elevator, dumbwaiter or any other purpose.    41.  A  "stair"  is  a  flight  or  flights of steps together with any  landings and parts of public halls through which it is necessary to pass  in going from one level thereof to another.    42. a. A "fire-tower" is a  fireproof  stair,  enclosed  in  fireproof  walls, without access to the building from which it affords egress other  than by a fireproof self-closing door opening on a communicating balcony  or other outside platform at each floor level.    b.  A  "fire-stair" is a fireproof stair, enclosed in fireproof walls,  within the body of the building which it serves, to which access may  be  had only through self-closing fireproof doors.    c.  A  "fire-escape"  is a combination of outside balconies and stairs  providing an unobstructed means of egress from  rooms  or  spaces  in  a  building.    d.  A  "panel  wall"  is  a  non-bearing wall in skeleton construction  erected between columns or piers and wholly supported at each story.43. Window dimensions shall always be taken between stop-beads or,  if  there  are  no  stop-beads, between the sides, head and sill of the sash  opening.    44. The term "owner" shall mean and include the owner or owners of the  freehold of the premises or lesser estate therein, a mortgagee or vendee  in  possession,  assignee of rents, receiver, executor, trustee, lessee,  agent, or any other person, firm or corporation, directly or  indirectly  in  control  of a dwelling. Whenever a multiple dwelling shall have been  declared a public nuisance to any extent  pursuant  to  paragraph  b  of  subdivision  one  of section three hundred nine of this chapter and such  declaration shall have been filed as therein provided, the term  "owner"  shall  be deemed to include, in addition to those mentioned hereinabove,  all the officers, directors and persons having an interest in more  than  ten  per cent of the issued and outstanding stock of the owner as herein  defined, as holder or beneficial owner  thereof,  if  such  owner  be  a  corporation  other than a banking organization as defined in section two  of the banking law, a national banking association,  a  federal  savings  and loan association, The Mortgage Facilities Corporation, Savings Banks  Life  Insurance Fund, The Savings Banks Retirement System, an authorized  insurer as defined in section one hundred seven of the insurance law, or  a trust company or other corporation organized under the  laws  of  this  state all the capital stock of which is owned by at least twenty savings  banks  or  a subsidiary corporation all of the capital stock of which is  owned by such trust company or other corporation.

State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Mdw > Article-1 > 4

§  4.  Definitions. Certain words and terms when used in this chapter,  unless the context or subject matter requires otherwise, are defined  as  follows:    1. Wherever the word or words "occupied," "is occupied," "used" or "is  used"  appear,  such  word or words shall be construed as if followed by  the words "or is intended, arranged or designed to be used or occupied."    2. The word "shall" is always mandatory.    3. The term "department" shall mean the department,  bureau,  division  or other agency charged with the enforcement of this chapter.    4.  A "dwelling" is any building or structure or portion thereof which  is occupied in whole or in part as the home, residence or sleeping place  of one or more human beings.    5. A "family" is either a person occupying a dwelling and  maintaining  a  household,  with  not more than four boarders, roomers or lodgers, or  two  or  more  persons  occupying  a  dwelling,  living   together   and  maintaining  a  common  household,  with  not  more  than four boarders,  roomers or lodgers.  A "boarder," "roomer" or "lodger" residing  with  a  family  shall  mean  a  person  living  within  the household who pays a  consideration for such residence and does not occupy such  space  within  the household as an incident of employment therein.    6.  A  "private  dwelling"  is  any building or structure designed and  occupied exclusively  for  residence  purposes  by  not  more  than  two  families.    A  building  designed  for and occupied exclusively by one family is a  "single-family private dwelling."    A building designed for and occupied exclusively by two families is  a  "two-family private dwelling."    Private  dwellings  shall  also  be  deemed  to  include  a  series of  one-family or two-family dwelling  units  each  of  which  faces  or  is  accessible  to  a legal street or public thoroughfare provided that each  such dwelling unit is equipped as a  separate  dwelling  unit  with  all  essential services, and also provided that each such unit is arranged so  that it may be approved as a legal one-family or two-family dwelling.    7. A "multiple dwelling" is a dwelling which is either rented, leased,  let  or  hired  out,  to be occupied, or is occupied as the residence or  home of three or more families living independently of  each  other.  On  and after July first, nineteen hundred fifty-five, a "multiple dwelling"  shall  also include residential quarters for members or personnel of any  hospital staff which are not located in any building used primarily  for  hospital  use  provided,  however,  that any building which was erected,  altered or converted prior to July first, nineteen  hundred  fifty-five,  to  be  occupied  by such members or personnel or is so occupied on such  date shall not be subject to the requirements of this  chapter  only  so  long  as  it  continues  to be so occupied provided there are local laws  applicable to such building and such building is in compliance with such  local laws. A "multiple dwelling" shall  not  be  deemed  to  include  a  hospital,  convent,  monastery,  asylum  or  public  institution,  or  a  fireproof building used wholly for commercial purposes  except  for  not  more  than  one  janitor's  apartment  and  not  more than one penthouse  occupied by not more than two families. For the purposes of this chapter  "multiple dwellings" are divided into two classes: "class A" and  "class  B."    8.  a.  A  "class  A" multiple dwelling is a multiple dwelling that is  occupied for permanent residence  purposes.  This  class  shall  include  tenements,   flat   houses,  maisonette  apartments,  apartment  houses,  apartment  hotels,  bachelor  apartments,  studio   apartments,   duplex  apartments,  kitchenette  apartments,  garden-type  maisonette  dwelling  projects, and all other  multiple  dwellings  except  class  B  multipledwellings.  A class A multiple dwelling shall only be used for permanent  residence purposes. For the  purposes  of  this  definition,  "permanent  residence purposes" shall consist of occupancy of a dwelling unit by the  same  natural person or family for thirty consecutive days or more and a  person or family so occupying a  dwelling  unit  shall  be  referred  to  herein  as  the permanent occupants of such dwelling unit. The following  uses of a dwelling unit by the permanent occupants thereof shall not  be  deemed  to  be inconsistent with the occupancy of such dwelling unit for  permanent residence purposes:    (1) (A)  occupancy  of  such  dwelling  unit  for  fewer  than  thirty  consecutive days by other natural persons living within the household of  the  permanent occupant such as house guests or lawful boarders, roomers  or lodgers; or    (B) incidental and occasional occupancy  of  such  dwelling  unit  for  fewer  than  thirty  consecutive  days by other natural persons when the  permanent occupants are temporarily absent for personal reasons such  as  vacation  or  medical  treatment,  provided  that  there  is no monetary  compensation paid to the permanent occupants for such occupancy.    (2)  In  a  class  A  multiple  dwelling  owned   by   an   accredited  not-for-profit  college  or  university  or  leased by such a college or  university under a net lease for a term of forty-nine years or more, the  use of designated dwelling units for occupancy  for  fewer  than  thirty  consecutive  days  shall  not be inconsistent with the occupancy of such  multiple dwelling for permanent residence purposes if:    (A) No more than five percent of the dwelling units in  such  multiple  dwelling  but  not  less than one dwelling unit, are designated for such  use and the designation of a unit  once  made  may  not  be  changed  to  another unit;    (B) A list of the designated dwelling units certified by an authorized  representative  of  the college or university is kept on the premises by  the owner or net lessee and made available upon request  for  inspection  by the department or the fire department of such city;    (C)  Only designated dwelling units on the certified list are used for  occupancy for fewer than thirty consecutive days and only by (i) natural  persons, other than persons whose only relationship with the college  or  university  is  as  a  student,  for  whom the college or university has  undertaken to provide housing accommodations such as visiting professors  and academics, graduate students with research or teaching  fellowships,  researchers  and  persons  presenting  academic papers, interviewing for  positions of employment  or  having  other  similar  business  with  the  college  or  university,  or  (ii)  natural  persons for whom a hospital  affiliated with such college or university  has  undertaken  to  provide  housing  accommodations  such  as  patients,  patients'  families and/or  accompanying escorts, medical professionals and  healthcare  consultants  or persons having other similar business with such hospital. A log shall  be maintained on the premises of the names and addresses of such persons  and the duration and reason for their stay. Such log shall be accessible  upon request for inspection by the department and the fire department of  such municipality;    (D) No rent or other payment is collected for such occupancy; and    (E)  The  fire  department  of such city shall require the filing of a  fire safety plan or other appropriate fire safety procedure.    b.  A  "garden-type  maisonette  dwelling  project"  is  a  series  of  attached, detached or semi-detached dwelling units which are provided as  a  group  collectively  with  all  essential  services  such as, but not  limited to, water supply and house sewers, and which units  are  located  on  a  site  or  plot  not less than twenty thousand square feet in area  under common ownership and erected under plans filed with the departmenton or after April eighteenth, nineteen  hundred  fifty-four,  and  which  units  together  and  in  their  aggregate  are  arranged or designed to  provide three or more apartments.    9.  A  "class  B"  multiple  dwelling  is a multiple dwelling which is  occupied, as a rule transiently, as the more or less temporary abode  of  individuals or families who are lodged with or without meals. This class  shall  include  hotels, lodging houses, rooming houses, boarding houses,  boarding schools, furnished room houses, lodgings, club houses,  college  and  school  dormitories and dwellings designed as private dwellings but  occupied by one or two families with five or  more  transient  boarders,  roomers or lodgers in one household.    10.  A  "converted  dwelling"  is  a dwelling (a) erected before April  eighteenth, nineteen hundred twenty-nine, to be occupied by one  or  two  families living independently of each other and subsequently occupied as  a  multiple  dwelling, or (b) a dwelling three stories or less in height  erected after April eighteenth,  nineteen  hundred  twenty-nine,  to  be  occupied  by  one or two families living independently of each other and  subsequently occupied by not more than three families  in  all,  with  a  maximum  occupancy of two families on each floor in a two story building  and one family on each floor in a three story  building,  in  compliance  with  the  provisions  of article six of this chapter, including section  one hundred seventy-a of said article. A converted dwelling occupied  as  a class A multiple dwelling is a class A converted dwelling; every other  converted dwelling is a class B converted dwelling.    11.  A "tenement" is any building or structure or any portion thereof,  erected before April eighteenth, nineteen hundred twenty-nine, which  is  occupied,  wholly or in part, as the residence of three families or more  living independently of each other and  doing  their  cooking  upon  the  premises,  and  includes  apartment  houses,  flat  houses and all other  houses so erected and occupied, except that  a  tenement  shall  not  be  deemed  to  include  any  converted dwelling. An "old-law tenement" is a  tenement existing  before  April  twelfth,  nineteen  hundred  one,  and  recorded  as  such  in  the department before April eighteenth, nineteen  hundred twenty-nine, except that it shall not be deemed to  include  any  converted dwelling.    12. A "hotel" is an inn having thirty or more sleeping rooms.    13.  A  "rooming  house"  or  a  "furnished  room house" is a multiple  dwelling, other than a hotel, having less than thirty sleeping rooms and  in which persons either individually or as families are housed for  hire  or  otherwise  with  or  without  meals.  An  inn  with less than thirty  sleeping rooms is a rooming house.    14. A "lodging house" is a multiple dwelling, other than  a  hotel,  a  rooming house or a furnished room house, in which persons are housed for  hire  for  a  single  night, or for less than a week at one time, or any  part of which is let for any person to sleep in for any term less than a  week.    15. An "apartment" is that part of a multiple dwelling  consisting  of  one  or  more  rooms containing at least one bathroom and arranged to be  occupied by the members of a family, which room or rooms  are  separated  and set apart from all other rooms within a multiple dwelling.    16.  "Single room occupancy" is the occupancy by one or two persons of  a single room, or of two  or  more  rooms  which  are  joined  together,  separated  from  all  other  rooms  within  an  apartment  in a multiple  dwelling, so that the occupant or occupants  thereof  reside  separately  and  independently  of  the  other  occupant  or  occupants  of the same  apartment. When a class A multiple dwelling is used wholly  or  in  part  for single room occupancy, it remains a class A multiple dwelling.17.  A  "public  hall"  is  a  hall,  corridor  or passageway within a  building but outside of all apartments and suites of  private  rooms.  A  "public  vestibule"  is  a corridor, not within an apartment or suite of  private rooms, providing access to a stair or  elevator  and  not  wider  than seven feet nor longer than twice the width of the stair or elevator  shafts  opening  upon it. A "public room" or "public part" of a dwelling  is a space used in common by the occupants of two or more apartments  or  rooms,  or by persons who are not tenants, or exclusively for mechanical  equipment of such dwelling or for storage purposes.    18. A "living room" is a room which  is  not  a  public  hall,  public  vestibule,  public  room  or other public part of a dwelling. Every room  used for sleeping purposes shall be deemed a living  room.  Dining  bays  and  dinettes  fifty-five  square  feet  or  less in floor area, foyers,  water-closet compartments, bathrooms, cooking spaces  less  than  eighty  square  feet  in  area,  and  halls,  corridors and passageways entirely  within an apartment or suite of rooms shall not be deemed living  rooms.  "Floor  space"  shall  mean the clear area of the floor contained within  the partitions or walls  enclosing  any  room,  space,  foyer,  hall  or  passageways of any dwelling.    19.  A "dining bay," "dining recess" or "dinette" is a recess used for  dining purposes off a living room, foyer or kitchen.    20. A "foyer" is a space within an apartment or suite of rooms used as  an entrance hall directly from a public hall.    21. A "dormitory" in a lodging house is any place  used  for  sleeping  purposes.  A  "cubicle"  is  a  small  partially enclosed sleeping space  within a dormitory with or without a window to the outer air.    22. "Premises" shall mean land and improvements  or  appurtenances  or  any part thereof.    23. "Structure" shall mean a building or construction of any kind.    24.  "Alteration,"  as  applied to a building or structure, shall mean  any change or rearrangement in the structural parts  or  in  the  egress  facilities  of  any  such  building  or  structure,  or  any enlargement  thereof, whether by extension on any side or by any increase in  height,  or  the  moving  of  such  building  or  structure  from one location or  position to another.    25. A "fireproof multiple dwelling" is one  in  which  the  walls  and  other  structural  members  are of incombustible materials or assemblies  meeting all of the requirements of the building code and  with  standard  fire-resistive  ratings  of  not  less than one of the following sets of  requirements:    a. For any multiple dwelling more than one  hundred  feet  in  height,  four  hours  for  fire  walls,  party  walls,  piers,  columns, interior  structural members which carry walls, girders carrying columns, and  for  exterior  walls  other  than panel walls; three hours for other girders,  fire partitions, floors including their beams and girders, beams, roofs,  floor fillings, and stairway enclosures;  and  two  hours  for  exterior  panel walls.    b.  For  any multiple dwelling one hundred feet or less in height, the  provisions of preceding paragraph a shall apply, except that the minimum  requirements shall be three hours for exterior walls  other  than  panel  walls,  which  shall  be two hours; two hours for protection of interior  columns; one and one-half hours for roofs  and  for  floors  and  beams;  provided, however, that for a multiple dwelling three stories or less in  height, the requirement for all floors and the roof shall be one hour.    26. The term "fireproof," as applied to a part or parts of a building,  means  such  part  or  parts  are  made  of incombustible materials with  standard fire-resistive ratings not less than  those  required  for  the  corresponding part or parts of a fireproof dwelling.27.  A  "non-fireproof  dwelling"  is  one  which  does  not  meet the  requirements for a fireproof dwelling.    28.  A  "frame  dwelling" is a dwelling of which the exterior walls or  any structural parts of such walls are of wood. A dwelling  which  would  not  otherwise  be a frame dwelling shall not be deemed a frame dwelling  by reason of the existence on such  dwelling  of  frame  oriel,  bay  or  dormer  windows,  frame  porches  not  more than one story in height, or  frame extensions not more than one story in height and fifty-nine square  feet in area if such windows, porches or extensions were  erected  prior  to April thirteenth, nineteen hundred forty.    29.  The  term  "fire-retarded,"  as  applied  to a part or parts of a  building, means such part or parts are either covered  with  metal  lath  plastered  with  two  or  more  coats  of  mortar or otherwise protected  against fire in a manner approved by the department  with  materials  of  standard fire-resistive ratings of at least one hour. Fireproofing shall  always be accepted as meeting any requirement for fire-retarding.    30.  "Fire-stopping" means the closing of all concealed draft openings  to form an effectual fire barrier at floors,  ceilings  and  roofs  with  brick,  concrete,  gypsum, asbestos, mineral wool, rock wool, metal lath  with  cement  or  gypsum  plaster,  or  other   approved   incombustible  materials.    31.  A "lot" is a parcel or plot of ground which is or may be occupied  wholly or in part by  a  dwelling,  including  the  spaces  occupied  by  accessory or other structures and any open or unoccupied spaces thereon,  but not including any part of an abutting public street or thoroughfare.    a.  A  "corner lot" is a lot of which at least two adjacent sides abut  for their full length upon streets or public places not less than  forty  feet  in  width.  That  portion of a corner lot in excess of one hundred  feet from any street on which the  lot  abuts  shall  be  considered  an  interior lot.    An "interior lot" is a lot which is neither a corner lot nor a through  lot.    b.  The  "front"  of  a  lot  is that boundary line which abuts on the  street, or, if there be more than one street  abutting,  on  the  street  designated  by  the  owner. The "rear" of a lot is the side opposite the  front.    c. The "depth" of a lot is the distance from the front of the  lot  to  the extreme rear line of the lot. In the case of an irregular-shaped lot  the mean depth shall be taken.    d.  A  "through  lot"  is  a lot running through from street to street  whose front and rear lines abut for their entire lengths upon streets or  open public places; provided, however, that when either  of  said  lines  exceeds the other in length by more than twenty per centum, that part of  the  lot  contiguous  to  the  excess length of the longer line shall be  deemed an interior lot. The department may designate which part  of  the  longer   line   is   the  excess  in  length  and  make  any  reasonable  interpretation of the part of the lot to be regarded  as  contiguous  to  such excess.    e.  Lots  or portions of lots shall be deemed "back to back" when they  are on opposite sides of the same part of a rear line common to both and  the opposite street lines on which the lots front are parallel with each  other or make an angle with each  other  of  not  more  than  forty-five  degrees.    32.  A  "rear  yard"  is an open space on the same lot with a dwelling  between the extreme rear line of the lot and the extreme  rear  wall  of  the  dwelling.  A "side yard" is a continuous open space on the same lot  with a dwelling between the wall of a dwelling and a  line  of  the  lot  from  the  street  to a rear yard or rear line of a lot. A "court" is anopen space other than a side  or  rear  yard,  on  the  same  lot  as  a  dwelling.  A court not extending to the street or rear yard is an "inner  court". A court extending to the  street  or  rear  yard  is  an  "outer  court".    32-a.  "A  rear yard equivalent" is an open area which may be required  on a through lot as an alternative to a required rear yard.    33. The "curb level", for the purpose of measuring the height  of  any  portion  of  a  building,  is the level of the curb at the center of the  front of the building; except that where a building faces on  more  than  one  street, the curb level is the average of the levels of the curbs at  the center of each front. Where no curb elevation has  been  established  the average elevation of the final grade adjoining all exterior walls of  a  building,  calculated from grade elevations taken at intervals of ten  feet around the exterior walls of the building, shall be considered  the  curb  level, unless the city engineer shall establish such curb level or  its equivalent.    34. A "street wall" of a building, at any level, is the  wall  of  the  building nearest to a street line abutting the property.    35.  a.  The  "height" of a dwelling is the vertical distance from the  curb level to the level of the highest point of the roof  beams;  except  that, in the case of pitched roofs, it is the vertical distance from the  curb  level  to  the  mean  height  level of the gable or roof above the  vertical street wall. When  no  roof  beams  exist  or  when  there  are  structures  wholly or partly above the roof, the height shall, except as  otherwise expressly provided, be measured from the  curb  level  to  the  level  of  the  highest  point  of any such structure; except that where  every part of the building is set back more than twenty-five feet from a  street line, the  height  shall  be  measured  from  the  average  grade  elevation  calculated from the final grade elevations taken at intervals  of ten feet around the exterior walls of the building.    b. Except as otherwise provided in section  two  hundred  eleven,  the  following superstructure shall not be considered in measuring the height  of  a  dwelling;  parapet walls or guard railings, other superstructures  twelve feet or less in height and occupying fifteen per centum  or  less  of  the  area  of  the  roof, elevator enclosures thirty feet or less in  height used solely for elevator purposes, enclosures fifty feet or  less  in  height  used  solely  for  tanks, cooling towers or other mechanical  equipment; and, when  approved  by  the  department,  pergolas,  spires,  chimneys, other ornamental treatments, roof gardens and playgrounds.    c.  When  on  the main roof of any fireproof multiple dwelling erected  after April eighteenth, nineteen hundred twenty-nine, in  which  one  or  more  passenger  elevators are operated, a penthouse dwelling is erected  the height of which does not exceed twelve feet and the walls  of  which  are  set back as provided in this paragraph, the height of such multiple  dwelling shall be measured as though no such penthouse had been  erected  thereon.  Such  penthouse walls shall be set back from the outer face of  the front parapet wall at least five feet, from the outer  face  of  the  yard  parapet  wall  at least ten feet, and from the inner face of every  other parapet wall at least three  feet;  except  that  the  setback  so  required  from  any  parapet  wall  facing  any  court or yard or recess  therefrom but not facing any street may be reduced  one-third  for  each  ten  per  centum  by  which  the  area of such court or yard exceeds the  required minimum area thereof at the highest level of such parapet wall,  and the setback so required from any parapet wall facing any street  may  be  reduced  one  foot  for each foot that such parapet wall is set back  from the building line established by law at the highest level  of  such  parapet  wall,  provided  that in the opinion of the department safe and  sufficient passage is provided to and from every part of the main  roof.Any penthouse wall which may be flush with the inner face of any parapet  wall may be flush with the outer face thereof.    d.  If  a  rear  multiple  dwelling is erected after April eighteenth,  nineteen hundred twenty-nine, on  the  same  lot  as  a  front  multiple  dwelling,  and  the  depth of the yard of the front multiple dwelling is  more than sixty feet and the lowest point of such yard is below the curb  level and below the floor of a cellar of the front multiple dwelling  or  of  the  lowest  story  thereof if there is no cellar, the height of the  rear multiple dwelling shall be measured from such lowest point  instead  of from the curb level.    36.  A  "story" is a space between the level of one finished floor and  the level of the next higher finished floor, or, if the  top  story,  of  the space between the level of the highest finished floor and the top of  the highest roof beams, or, if the first story, of the space between the  level  of the finished floor and the finished ceiling immediately above.  For the purpose of measuring height by  stories  in  multiple  dwellings  erected  after  April  eighteenth,  nineteen  hundred  twenty-nine,  one  additional story shall be added for each twelve feet or fraction thereof  that the first story exceeds fifteen feet in height, and for each twelve  feet or fraction thereof that any story above the  first  story  exceeds  twelve feet in height.    37.  A  "cellar"  in  a dwelling is an enclosed space having more than  one-half of its height below the curb level;  except  that  where  every  part  of  the  building  is  set  back more than twenty-five feet from a  street line, the height shall  be  measured  from  the  adjoining  grade  elevations  calculated from final grade elevations taken at intervals of  ten feet around the exterior walls of the building. A cellar  shall  not  be counted as a story.    38.  A "basement" is a story partly below the curb level but having at  least one-half of its height above the curb  level;  except  that  where  every part of the building is set back more than twenty-five feet from a  street  line,  the  height  shall  be  measured from the adjoining grade  elevations calculated from final grade elevations taken at intervals  of  ten  feet around the exterior walls of the building. A basement shall be  counted as  a  story  in  determining  height,  except  as  provided  in  paragraph e of subdivision six of section one hundred two.    39.  A  "section" of a multiple dwelling is a part thereof, other than  an apartment or suite of rooms, separated as a unit  from  the  rest  of  such dwelling by fireproof construction.    40.  A  "shaft"  is  an  enclosed  space extending through one or more  stories of a building connecting a series of openings  therein,  or  any  story or stories and the roof, and includes exterior and interior shafts  whether for air, light, elevator, dumbwaiter or any other purpose.    41.  A  "stair"  is  a  flight  or  flights of steps together with any  landings and parts of public halls through which it is necessary to pass  in going from one level thereof to another.    42. a. A "fire-tower" is a  fireproof  stair,  enclosed  in  fireproof  walls, without access to the building from which it affords egress other  than by a fireproof self-closing door opening on a communicating balcony  or other outside platform at each floor level.    b.  A  "fire-stair" is a fireproof stair, enclosed in fireproof walls,  within the body of the building which it serves, to which access may  be  had only through self-closing fireproof doors.    c.  A  "fire-escape"  is a combination of outside balconies and stairs  providing an unobstructed means of egress from  rooms  or  spaces  in  a  building.    d.  A  "panel  wall"  is  a  non-bearing wall in skeleton construction  erected between columns or piers and wholly supported at each story.43. Window dimensions shall always be taken between stop-beads or,  if  there  are  no  stop-beads, between the sides, head and sill of the sash  opening.    44. The term "owner" shall mean and include the owner or owners of the  freehold of the premises or lesser estate therein, a mortgagee or vendee  in  possession,  assignee of rents, receiver, executor, trustee, lessee,  agent, or any other person, firm or corporation, directly or  indirectly  in  control  of a dwelling. Whenever a multiple dwelling shall have been  declared a public nuisance to any extent  pursuant  to  paragraph  b  of  subdivision  one  of section three hundred nine of this chapter and such  declaration shall have been filed as therein provided, the term  "owner"  shall  be deemed to include, in addition to those mentioned hereinabove,  all the officers, directors and persons having an interest in more  than  ten  per cent of the issued and outstanding stock of the owner as herein  defined, as holder or beneficial owner  thereof,  if  such  owner  be  a  corporation  other than a banking organization as defined in section two  of the banking law, a national banking association,  a  federal  savings  and loan association, The Mortgage Facilities Corporation, Savings Banks  Life  Insurance Fund, The Savings Banks Retirement System, an authorized  insurer as defined in section one hundred seven of the insurance law, or  a trust company or other corporation organized under the  laws  of  this  state all the capital stock of which is owned by at least twenty savings  banks  or  a subsidiary corporation all of the capital stock of which is  owned by such trust company or other corporation.