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Why Your Underground Parking Garage Is Not a Storage Unit
Spare tires, old furniture, strollers sitting in the corner of the parking garage — it seems harmless until it isn't. As a building superintendent, I've seen how fast clutter in underground parking can turn into a real safety problem, and most tenants genuinely don't realize the risks they're creating.
Why Your Underground Parking Garage Is Not a Storage Unit
I get it. The parking spot feels like your space. You pay for it, you use it every day, and that corner next to your car seems like a perfectly reasonable place to stash a spare tire or leave that old bookshelf you haven't gotten rid of yet. I've heard every version of this reasoning over the years.
But here's the thing — underground parking garages are shared infrastructure. They're not extensions of your unit. And the stuff people leave down there creates problems that go way beyond a messy-looking garage.
What I Actually See Down There
In my experience, the clutter builds up gradually. It starts with one spare tire. Then someone else leaves a stroller they only use seasonally. Then a bike with a flat tire that's been sitting for eight months. Then boxes, then a broken shelving unit, then furniture someone was "about to" donate.
Before long, you've got a parking garage that looks more like a storage locker explosion. And every single one of those items is now someone else's problem — usually mine.
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