OPINION OF THE COURT
Memorandum.
Final judgments unanimously affirmed without costs.
In 1999, landlord purchased contiguous, four-unit apartment buildings at 55 and 57 Monroe Avenue, Staten Island, pursuant to the Department of Housing Preservation and Development’s asset sales program, and as a condition of the sale, she gave her tenants two-year leases (see Matter of DeJesus v Roberts,
Adjacent structures constitute a regulated horizontal multiple dwelling when the “indicia of common facilities, common ownership, management and operation to warrant treating the housing as an integrated unit” (Matter of Salvati v Eimicke,
Although presently exhibiting a uniform facade and a continuous roof cornice, the two structures, built before 1923, preserve their original internal architectures consisting of four-family independently-numbered tenements erected contiguously on what were then separate lots. Internally, the structures share only a common wall and, aside from heat conduits, there are no connecting passages from roof to basement floor. A 1923 alterations plan, which refers to the structures as the “tenements,” reveals that, as today, they had separate entrance doors, vestibules, staircases to the upper floors and basement, fire escapes, and chimneys, and were served by separate electricity, gas, water and sewer lines. The apartments in each structure currently have separate sets of utility meters,
“[S]ince cases present various combinations of these factors, no one factor can be said to be determinative” nor does satisfaction of one or more elements of the test necessarily compel a finding of integration (First Sterling Corp. v Catapano, NYLJ, Apr. 8, 1991, at 26, col 1 [App Term, 1st Dept]). Claims of common ownership, heating, and tax assessment, even considered collectively, do not require a finding of an integrated multiple dwelling where the countervailing factors, as here, are more compelling (e.g. Jackson v Biderman,
Pesce, P.J., Golia and Rios, JJ., concur.
