Reverend Conehead
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My idiot neighbor in the apartment upstairs can't seem to walk without stomping. He's a young guy, maybe 25, about 5' 9", and maybe around 170 pounds. He's not André the Giant, but he can't seem to walk across his floor without stomping. The previous tenant never did that. I always avoided stomping when I lived on an upper floor. People don't realize how loud it is below. The trick is you don't let your heel come down for hard contact.
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I'm a live and let live person. I'm not out to hassle anyone, but this is driving me nuts. Some days it's non-stop. Some days I get a reprieve if he goes somewhere. My cat doesn't like it either. When it's going BOOM-BOOM-BOOM-BOOM-BOOM-BOOM, the glass in my sliding door shakes, and my cat runs and hides under the dresser.
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So I reluctantly complained to the property management, and here's what they promised to do about it: NOTHING! They said they can't contact a tenant with a noise complaint if it's about stomping on the floor, and that some sound is expected. I said, yes, there's always some sound with normal walking, but this is stomping that makes my windows shake. The landlord said she can only do a noise complaint if it's loud music. [What? Only music, and nothing else, can be too loud? ] I had heard the previous tenant walking, and it was just some basic floor creaking, something you can easily tune out. But I'm not able to just tune out BOOM-BOOM-BOOM-BOOM-BOOM [window pane rattle]. What's worse is I had just signed a year lease renewal just before this goober moved in.
What gives? Am I expecting too much to not want to listen to stomping all day? Do I have to take a video of my cat running and hiding from the noise to convince this property management? Up until now, this company has been perfectly fine. They responded to complaints from multiple tenants about a particular neighbor who used to pull up in his car at midnight with rap music blasting with a super woofer. But, somehow if the noise is someone stomping across the floor, they can't do anything.
What do you think I should do?
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1. Complain more vehemently to the landlord.
2. Have a lawyer accuse them of breech of contract.
3. Ask to be moved to an upper floor.
4. Talk to the neighbor myself.
5. Pound on the ceiling.
6. Tough out the remaining 10 months of the lease and then move.
.
I'm a live and let live person. I'm not out to hassle anyone, but this is driving me nuts. Some days it's non-stop. Some days I get a reprieve if he goes somewhere. My cat doesn't like it either. When it's going BOOM-BOOM-BOOM-BOOM-BOOM-BOOM, the glass in my sliding door shakes, and my cat runs and hides under the dresser.
.
So I reluctantly complained to the property management, and here's what they promised to do about it: NOTHING! They said they can't contact a tenant with a noise complaint if it's about stomping on the floor, and that some sound is expected. I said, yes, there's always some sound with normal walking, but this is stomping that makes my windows shake. The landlord said she can only do a noise complaint if it's loud music. [What? Only music, and nothing else, can be too loud? ] I had heard the previous tenant walking, and it was just some basic floor creaking, something you can easily tune out. But I'm not able to just tune out BOOM-BOOM-BOOM-BOOM-BOOM [window pane rattle]. What's worse is I had just signed a year lease renewal just before this goober moved in.
What gives? Am I expecting too much to not want to listen to stomping all day? Do I have to take a video of my cat running and hiding from the noise to convince this property management? Up until now, this company has been perfectly fine. They responded to complaints from multiple tenants about a particular neighbor who used to pull up in his car at midnight with rap music blasting with a super woofer. But, somehow if the noise is someone stomping across the floor, they can't do anything.
What do you think I should do?
.
1. Complain more vehemently to the landlord.
2. Have a lawyer accuse them of breech of contract.
3. Ask to be moved to an upper floor.
4. Talk to the neighbor myself.
5. Pound on the ceiling.
6. Tough out the remaining 10 months of the lease and then move.