Elevated homes in New Dorp Beach, Staten Island

Build It Back elevated homes in New Dorp Beach, Staten Island

Elevated homes in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn

Build It Back elevates and rebuilds homes in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn

Attached, two-family elevated homes

Attached, two-family elevated homes in Arverne, Queens

Three elevated homes

Three elevated homes side-by-side in Midland Beach, Staten Island

Modular home being lowered into place

Final section of a Build It Back modular home lowered into place in Broad Channel, Queens

Welcome to NYC Housing Recovery

The NYC’s Mayor’s Office of Housing Recovery Operations (HRO) administers the Build It Back program which has helped 12,500 families recover from Hurricane Sandy by providing resources for impacted New Yorkers to repair, rebuild, and elevate their homes, or relocate.  Build It Back efforts have helped communities across Sandy-impacted areas across the five boroughs.

In the hardest hit waterfront communities, Build It Back has rebuilt and elevated over 1,300 homes to today’s stringent regulations for flood compliance to protect against future coastal storms and highly damaging storm surge, often elevating homes 10 to 14 feet.  Addressing the complex challenges of building in an urban environment, with hundreds of attached homes, homes with an average age of over 80 years, zoning and fire code constraints, and difficult soil and wetland conditions, the City has innovated with different contractor models, design innovations, the introduction of a modular home program, and community-driven solutions to replace shared infrastructure and utilities.

In communities with the highest level of damage and risk, approximately 800 homes have been purchased through a combination of City- and State- administered buy-out and acquisition programs funded through Federal disaster recovery funds.

Another 6,500 homeowners with moderate Sandy damage have been assisted with repair and reimbursement, helping neighborhoods that were not in FEMA’s 100‐year floodplain when Sandy hit and homeowners who didn’t have flood insurance.

Build It Back’s Multifamily Program has assisted more than 19,600 households in 143 developments through assistance for repairs, resiliency upgrades, and reimbursement services, as well as providing rental assistance for 242 low-income households.

The NYC’s Mayor’s Office of Housing Recovery Operations (HRO) administers the Build It Back program which has helped 12,500 families recover from Hurricane Sandy by providing resources for impacted New Yorkers to repair, rebuild, and elevate their homes, or relocate.  Build It Back efforts have helped communities across Sandy-impacted areas across the five boroughs.

In the hardest hit waterfront communities, Build It Back has rebuilt and elevated over 1,300 homes to today’s stringent regulations for flood compliance to protect against future coastal storms and highly damaging storm surge, often elevating homes 10 to 14 feet.  Addressing the complex challenges of building in an urban environment, with hundreds of attached homes, homes with an average age of over 80 years, zoning and fire code constraints, and difficult soil and wetland conditions, the City has innovated with different contractor models, design innovations, the introduction of a modular home program, and community-driven solutions to replace shared infrastructure and utilities.

In communities with the highest level of damage and risk, approximately 800 homes have been purchased through a combination of City- and State- administered buy-out and acquisition programs funded through Federal disaster recovery funds.

Another 6,500 homeowners with moderate Sandy damage have been assisted with repair and reimbursement, helping neighborhoods that were not in FEMA’s 100‐year floodplain when Sandy hit and homeowners who didn’t have flood insurance.
Build It Back’s Multifamily Program has assisted more than 19,600 households in 143 developments through assistance for repairs, resiliency upgrades, and reimbursement services, as well as providing rental assistance for 242 low-income households.

Hurricane Ida Supplemental Funding Program

The NYC Mayor’s Office of Housing Recovery Operations (HRO) seeks to provide homeowners who incurred damage as a direct result of Hurricane Ida with supplemental Disaster Relief reimbursement.  For homeowners who applied for FEMA benefits but did not receive enough funding from FEMA to make their homes habitable, the City of New York may provide up to an additional $72,000 in repairs. The combined amount of funding from the City of New York and FEMA cannot exceed $72,000.

More information on the Ida Supplemental Program can be found here