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Imagine a neighborhood where some people got sick with a serious lung infection called Legionnaires’ disease. City health detectives found that 46 people in the Upper East Side (specifically ZIP codes 10028, 10128, and 10075 — areas called Carnegie Hill and Yorkville) have gotten sick.
Here are the key facts:
Quick note: “Preliminarily tested positive” means an early quick check — it does not prove the germ was alive or that it made people sick.
Big buildings often have a machine outside or on the roof called a cooling tower. Its job is to help cool the building by pushing out a fine mist (tiny water droplets) into the outdoor air.
The city shared addresses of 31 buildings where the early test found bits of the bacteria in their cooling towers. Some famous spots include:
A map was published with green markers for sites already cleaned and red markers for sites ordered to clean and disinfect.
The city says this list is preliminary and might grow because they are still testing samples from 183 cooling towers total. More positive early results could be reported over the weekend.
The city used a quick test called PCR (think of it like a detective finding a tiny piece of the germ’s DNA — like finding a lost LEGO brick from a set).
So the city is also doing a culture test: they try to grow the germ in a lab (like planting a seed to see if it sprouts). That takes up to two weeks.
If live germs are found, they will use a fancy method called whole-genome sequencing (like comparing the full recipe of the germ) to match it to sick patients and find the exact source. This takes even more time.
City Health Commissioner Dr. Alister Martin said: “It’s important for us to not wait two weeks. That’s why you see us acting fast at this point.”
Mayor Zohran Mamdani said: “We want to be transparent with New Yorkers about this. We’re looking to do it as quickly as we can.” This is described as a more aggressive and transparent response than the city has used before.
Heads up! There is no extra risk from being inside any of these buildings. The issue is only the outside mist from cooling towers.
- You can drink tap water, shower, bathe, cook, and use your indoor AC normally.
- Masks are NOT recommended because the disease doesn’t spread person-to-person and there’s no proof masking prevents exposure to Legionella.
- If you don’t have a doctor, call 311 or NYC Health + Hospitals for low- or no-cost care. (No separate free testing program was announced.)
Imagine your lungs get infected after you breathe in tiny water drops containing live Legionella bacteria. That causes a serious type of pneumonia (lung sickness).
Who is more likely to get very sick?
In short: A Legionnaires’ disease outbreak on the Upper East Side has sickened 46 people. Early tests found genetic traces of the causing bacteria in cooling towers at 31 buildings (including the Guggenheim, Whole Foods, Asphalt Green, and Trevor Day School). 19 towers are already cleaned; 12 must be cleaned by Saturday. The quick test doesn’t prove live germs, but the city is acting fast to clean anyway. Residents are safe inside buildings and can use water and AC normally. The city is doing more tests to find the exact source. If you feel flu-like symptoms and were in the area since late June, see a doctor. The list may grow as 183 towers are tested.
1. Can I get Legionnaires’ disease from another person?
No. It is not contagious. You only get it by breathing in mist containing live Legionella bacteria from places like cooling towers.
2. Is my tap water or shower safe?
Yes! The bacteria were found in outside cooling towers, not the building plumbing. Officials say you can drink, cook, bathe, and use indoor AC normally.
3. Why clean buildings if the test might be wrong about live germs?
The quick PCR test only finds DNA left behind. But because live germs are the only danger, the city uses emergency rules to clean immediately rather than wait two weeks for the slow test — better safe than sorry.
4. Will more people get sick?
Possibly. Symptoms can take up to 14 days to appear, and there’s lag time before a patient seeks care and reports. Health Commissioner Martin said, “We may continue to see cases pop up.”
5. How can I get checked if I don’t have a doctor?
Call 311 or NYC Health + Hospitals for low- or no-cost care. The city has not set up a standalone free testing program, but they will connect you to care.