Local Law 97 and Windows: What Actually Counts Toward Compliance
How fenestration upgrades feed a building’s LL97 emissions model, what U-values and SHGC ratings matter, and what a window project typically buys you toward compliance.
Local Law 97 is the NYC ordinance that imposes carbon emissions caps on buildings over 25,000 square feet. The caps tightened in 2024, tighten again in 2030, and continue tightening through 2050. Buildings that exceed their cap pay a penalty — $268 per metric ton of CO₂e over the limit, every year.
For most NYC mid-rise and high-rise buildings, windows are one of the highest-leverage envelope upgrades available. Here’s how they actually count in an LL97 compliance model.
How LL97 Measures a Building
LL97 measures a building’s emissions intensity in metric tons of CO₂e per square foot per year. The limit varies by occupancy classification (residential, office, retail, hospital, etc.). The 2024–2029 caps are relatively generous — most well-managed buildings already comply. The 2030–2034 caps drop sharply, and the 2035–2050 trajectory pushes most buildings toward deep envelope and mechanical upgrades.
A building’s emissions intensity is calculated from its annual energy consumption (electricity, gas, steam, oil) translated through emission factors back to CO₂e. Anything that reduces energy consumption lowers the building’s emissions intensity directly.
Where Windows Fit in the Calculation
Heating and cooling load is one of the largest energy consumers in any NYC building. The exterior envelope — walls, windows, roof — controls how much heat escapes in winter and how much heat enters in summer. Windows are typically the weakest thermal point in the envelope of an older NYC building.
For a typical pre-war NYC residential building, windows can account for 30–40% of total heat loss. Replacing single-pane wood windows from the 1920s with high-performance modern systems typically reduces a building’s heating load by 15–25% — which translates directly to reduced gas consumption and reduced emissions.
The Metrics That Matter
Three numbers on every NFRC-certified window label affect a building’s emissions model:
- U-Value — the rate of heat transfer through the window. Lower is better. NYC code requires a maximum of 0.32 for most residential applications. Premium high-performance windows reach 0.20 or below.
- SHGC (Solar Heat Gain Coefficient) — how much solar heat the window admits. A lower SHGC reduces cooling load in summer but also reduces beneficial passive winter heating. The right number depends on orientation.
- Visible Light Transmittance — how much light passes through. Higher VLT reduces dependence on artificial lighting. Less directly relevant to LL97 but worth specifying.
What a Typical Window Project Buys You
For a 50–200 unit NYC residential building running on gas heat, replacing original or first-generation replacement windows with a modern high-performance package typically yields:
- 15–25% reduction in heating load (winter)
- 10–15% reduction in cooling load (summer)
- Improved tenant comfort — reduced drafts, reduced solar gain on south/west exposures
- Quieter interiors — meaningful for high-traffic corridors
- Better-looking building — matters for sales and rental positioning
The emissions math depends on building specifics — existing window U-values, exposure, heating system type, occupancy pattern. An energy consultant runs the actual model. But for most pre-war and mid-century NYC residential buildings, a window-only project moves the needle by enough to matter in the 2030 compliance window.
Combined With Other Envelope Work
Window replacement compounds well with other building upgrades. The most common pairings:
- Heat pump conversion — better-performing windows reduce the size and cost of the heat pump system the building needs. Avoiding oversizing saves both capital cost and operating cost.
- Roof insulation and air sealing — windows are one part of a tight envelope. Doing the roof and the windows together is typically cheaper than doing each separately because of the staging and contractor mobilization economics.
- Boiler upgrade or DHW separation — combined with a lower heating load, a smaller and more efficient boiler can serve the building.
Working With Your Energy Consultant
We coordinate directly with the energy consultant your building is using for its LL97 compliance plan. We provide:
- NFRC certifications for every specified window
- U-value and SHGC data sheets
- Existing-condition window assessment and infiltration estimates where available
- Installation method documentation (the actual installed performance can vary from the rated performance if the installation is poor — we document the procedure)
The consultant runs the energy model with our numbers plugged in. If your building is targeting a specific 2030 compliance threshold, we can help iterate on product specification to hit the model the consultant needs.
Where Kenemax Fits
For buildings approaching the 2030 LL97 compliance window, the planning conversation usually starts 18–24 months ahead of the deadline because of board approval timelines and product lead times. We’re happy to walk through your building’s envelope condition and existing window specification with your management team, ahead of any commitment to a scope.
Have a project where this matters?
Tell us about your building and we’ll come back with the specifics — scope, timeline, and what the application or compliance path looks like for your specific case.
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