Above: One of the top ten most problematic properties on the Good Cause list, located on 5th Avenue South. The city says the building has unpaid taxes and fines, multiple nuisance violations, a condemnation notice for lack of maintenance, an unpermitted work violation and three nuisance or violence-related police calls.

City housing officials released an updated list Friday of rental properties that scored highest in a new system of holding problem landlords accountable.

The so-called "Good Cause" list susses out properties that are the most taxing on city resources based on an objective scoring metric. It tracks condemnation notices, letters for substandard conditions, delinquent fines or taxes, police calls, illegal occupancy and unpermitted work. Click here to read the full criteria.

Owners of properties that score 7 points or higher must meet with the city and develop an improvement plan before they can obtain additional rental licenses.

Previously the city released about half of the third quarter list, withholding properties whose owners had not been notified. The new map below reflects the entire list.

The densest cluster was in the North Side neighborhoods of Folwell, Jordan, McKinley and Hawthorne. The neighborhoods surrounding Lake Street from Interstate 35W to Hiawatha Avenue featured the lion's share of the remainder.

Only three properties contain more than four units, which may be due to different methods for inspecting those buildings. The two buildings with more than 20 units are in the Longfellow and Howe neighborhoods.

See below for the map and list of properties. Zoom in and click on properties for more information.

Use the tabs below to toggle between the properties and how many properties their respective owners control.