I have loathed having to live in an apartment next to (and underneath) Airbnb units. What started out as a wonderful apartment has now felt increasingly unsafe thanks to their proliferation in our building. Tonight, we got word that one of the four lockboxes, used to store keys for these vacation rentals, was breached and the thief took the key to our entry door. I looked it up and seems they are incredibly easy to breach. So now, the owners who don't even live here and can't be bothered to even meet the strangers they rent units to, that we have to live with...have put us all at risk of robbery tonight until the locksmith can come tomorrow.
This is one part cautionary tale one part rant. This sort of crime is on the rise, for obvious reasons. Airbnbs don't belong in long-term apartments, especially if the owners are not vetting their guests by checking them in/out. Perhaps making them pay for 24 security, at the very least, if they're putting us all at risk, might be a decent compromise? I've seen a lot of apartments in Palermo, Recoleta, etc...using these lockboxes, hung proudly on rails of the building near entryways. Is there anything we can do as long-term tenants to get rid of these obvious security breaches? Or deal with strangers vacationing that can't be bothered to close the entry doors properly, who invite even more strangers in to party? I can't wait until Airbnb is a relic. It's awful. Apartment buildings shouldn't be converted into hostels. I'd move, but they're all like this now. I shouldn't have to feel so unsafe in my the apartment where I take refuge.
At least when the platform started, the owner of the unit had to be on-site and check these guests in, in-person, which allows them to asses the guests and also, be on hand if they start causing trouble and they'd be personally in charge of handling our entry key and not leave it dangling for any street though to ply open in a matter of minutes. Many cities in Europe have banned these and I wish (at the very least) building admin would start doing this too, if not rethink allowing vacation rentals all together. Airbnb and their ilk should just buy up some of these vacant apartment blocks and reserve them solely for their services. Like aparthotels they already have but under their own moniker. Cause, what it has devolved into now, absolutely nobody taking responsibility but raking in loads of money for these ghost properties, this isn't the way.
This is one part cautionary tale one part rant. This sort of crime is on the rise, for obvious reasons. Airbnbs don't belong in long-term apartments, especially if the owners are not vetting their guests by checking them in/out. Perhaps making them pay for 24 security, at the very least, if they're putting us all at risk, might be a decent compromise? I've seen a lot of apartments in Palermo, Recoleta, etc...using these lockboxes, hung proudly on rails of the building near entryways. Is there anything we can do as long-term tenants to get rid of these obvious security breaches? Or deal with strangers vacationing that can't be bothered to close the entry doors properly, who invite even more strangers in to party? I can't wait until Airbnb is a relic. It's awful. Apartment buildings shouldn't be converted into hostels. I'd move, but they're all like this now. I shouldn't have to feel so unsafe in my the apartment where I take refuge.
At least when the platform started, the owner of the unit had to be on-site and check these guests in, in-person, which allows them to asses the guests and also, be on hand if they start causing trouble and they'd be personally in charge of handling our entry key and not leave it dangling for any street though to ply open in a matter of minutes. Many cities in Europe have banned these and I wish (at the very least) building admin would start doing this too, if not rethink allowing vacation rentals all together. Airbnb and their ilk should just buy up some of these vacant apartment blocks and reserve them solely for their services. Like aparthotels they already have but under their own moniker. Cause, what it has devolved into now, absolutely nobody taking responsibility but raking in loads of money for these ghost properties, this isn't the way.