Updated, 9:02 a.m.

Good morning on this mediocre Thursday.

New York is considered one of the most exciting, dynamic and cosmopolitan cities in the world.

One thing it’s not? The cleanest.

Our city generates a lot of trash. The Department of Sanitation collected 3,196,200 tons of residential trash (excluding recyclables) last year. That’s around 749 pounds per New Yorker, or just over two pounds per resident per day.

Inevitably, some of it ends up on the street.

It’s not hard to find a street strewn with garbage, whether it’s on the shores of Brooklyn or on the blocks of the Upper East Side.

We examined calls made last year to the 311 complaint line to find the blocks with the most reports of dirty conditions, which include things like messy streets and sidewalks, litter and dog waste.