He’s got the lobes for business
We had this discussion the other day
“You hear that noice? What the fuck are they nailing over there at this time (late evening)??”
*hears a moan*
“Oh damn, never mind then”
Also fun times thinking our neighbor had a treadmill she ran on a pretty regularly throughout the week but turns out she was just getting railed on a schedule by a dude who kept a very constant pace. I honestly still crack up when I see a treadmill. Dum-dum-dum-dum-dum-dum-dum for 10 minutes. A real metronome, that guy.
Man fuck apartments
Dickhead neighbors, dickhead managers, dickhead landlords. Rent is too damn high. Screaming children. Cops getting call for domestic disputes and blocking hallways. Laundry room politics. Do you want me to go on?
They really need weight and age limits on upper floors. So tired of fatass Mcgee and his unhinged kids playing hopscotch with Danish clogs on day and night.
Actually I’d want you to go on.
Those seemingly universal issues with management, landlords and rents could be lessened by more co-op housing, I’d also contrast those issues with HOAs in suburbs.
Relations with neighbours depend on what kind of issues exist and general social net of a given area. People might complain or argue less when the social stratification doesn’t hinder the access to their needs.
ACAB.
Hallways are sacred. Blocking hallways is a fire safety issue and should be dealt with proportionally seriously by the inhabitants. Asking the neighbours with clearing the hallways creates interaction and teaches mutual care and consideration. Anything else could be escalated.
Laundry room politics is a landlord and tenant protection failure, tenants have a right to affordable clean clothes IMO.
I’d also argue that apartments have a bunch of advantages for a city as they provide density-related infrastructure for better mobility (i.e. public transit, shorter travel times), better access to consumption and jobs et cetera.
For those interested that’s Jerzy Urban