The joys of co-op

Jul 06, 2006 11:42

Maybe someone out there is more knowledgeable than we are...Say, two people are renting apartment and the apartment originally has a lock on the door to which the super of the building has a key to. If the people put their own extra lock on the door do they HAVE TO give super a copy of the key to the new lock? Can the super break into their ( Read more... )

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atlantidax July 6 2006, 16:03:31 UTC
I am not an expert on this, but I've never heard of a super having a key to an occupied apartment. It's your apartment - noone should have a permission to enter it while you are not there, including plumbers....

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granada84 July 6 2006, 16:09:13 UTC
See, that's what I think too...But then the super said, if he needs to come in, in case of emergency, he will break the door, and that would be our responsibility/problem to fix it. So maybe it makes sense to let him have the key right away...It's not like he would be wondering in our apartment any times EXCEPT for emergency.

I think these are co-op rules though because I have heard from several people that their super or owner have the keys to their apartment. But I guess I'm so property-oriented that the mere thought of someone else coming in while I'm not there makes me pissed.

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atlantidax July 6 2006, 16:34:49 UTC
What kind of emergency? How often do these emergencies occur?
I know I would have a BIG problem with that.
We needed our super to come in and fix the bathroom one time (it was clogged, we couldn't even take showers) - and even then we wouldn't leave him the key...

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granada84 July 6 2006, 16:50:32 UTC
Yeah I don't know...I guess flood or fire would be considered emergencies. It's true though, they don't happen often. So probably it's more of a pre-caution measure.

Perhaps it depends on the policy of the building. I guess they can't physically make us leave them the key, but they warned us about the consequences. So it's up to us to choose which path to take...Yeah, I kinda feel weird about that too, but I just don't see what we can do...

If the plumbing problem affects the floor below us as well (say the water would drip), it would be sorta emergency measure if our neighbor's ceiling drops while we are out of the apartment. So then, I guess it would be better to give them a chance to fix the problem without extreme measures. Ehh...It's so complicated all of a sudden. Nu chto zh, dobro pozhalovat' v vzrosluyu zhizn'!

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marishastervoza July 6 2006, 16:53:13 UTC
that's not true... a super should have the key to your appt. my mom lives in a co-op, and that's normal. yes, in case of emergency super has a right to go into your appt, since the apt is not technically yours.

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granada84 July 6 2006, 17:00:47 UTC
Well, so based on all of these discussions, it does happen in some buildings. ;) I guess I just wasn't aware of it so directly.

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marishastervoza July 6 2006, 17:11:48 UTC
yuuup :) don't stress about it :) seriously, it's normal.

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granada84 July 6 2006, 17:16:23 UTC
;)

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