Yes, this is another post complaining about cigarette smoke from a neighbor. I’ve read previous posts on this topic and, as this is obviously a touchy issue, I would like to try a different approach, if possible.

I purchased a co-op that I (mostly) love in Park Slope a year ago. The building was built in 1920 and I am on the top floor. During the months before closing, one of the residents in the unit below mine was not around. Shortly after moving in, he returned and I learned for the first time that there was a chain smoker in the building and there is a significant amount of shared air between our units.

The extremity and the frequency of the cigarette (and, occasionally less legal substances) smoke is beyond anything I could have imagined possible. Several times daily, it is as though there is someone smoking in the room with me. Mornings, my place smells like an ashtray. Sometimes I can smell the tobacco on my clothes even when I am outside of my apartment.

I informed the president of the co-op who instructed me to take it up with the tenants, which I have done now many, many times. They are always very nice. Sometimes, the problem seems to get better for a short period (although it has never gone away). It always returns as bad as ever, prompting me to have yet another conversation that sometimes is somewhat effective, sometimes not.

To try and fix the issue, I put in two additional layers of flooring. I sealed all the corners with expanding foam and/or caulk. I plugged the outlets. I even spent over $1100 on an air purifier specifically designed to address cigarette smoke. Needless to say, this continues to be a problem or I wouldn’t be writing here.

To complicate this issue, I have also been getting severe headaches on a regular basis (3-4 a month, each lasting for a day or two). I cannot conclusively tie the headaches to the smoke, as I used to get about one of these headaches once every two or three years. Suddenly the headaches are a regular occurrence. A nurse told me that cigarette smoke can be a trigger for cluster headaches.

I have spent many days in the bedroom to avoid the smoke in the living room and nights on the couch in the living room to avoid smoke in the bedroom. Twice, in desperation, I moved my mattress to the kitchen and slept there to get away from the smoke.

Unfortunately, selling is not an option for me because of the state of the housing market and the building flip tax. Not to mention all the money I have already invested in this unit.

Just writing this down here, the situation feels over-the-top, and at times it is. But nothing has been exaggerated or distorted. I would love any suggestions about regarding my options. What do the people on Brownstoner suggest? Is there something I have overlooked?


Comments

  1. the smoker in question here was doing the right thing, and going outside to smoke. sounds like they were trying to be considerate of others and it wasn’t until they were forced back into the apartment by the president of the co-op, making it everyone elses problem.

    i really question if smoke was getting into the president’s apartment from outside – he probably just doesn’t want someone loitering infront of his place on a regular basis.

  2. Tradmod – Having been in a co-op myself, you are precisely the kind of shareholder you’re describing & who determined my decision to move out.

  3. Is this some way to increase posting counts?

    Traditionalmod, the courts have already taken up the issue, by no way is it against the law to smoke in a coop.

    If it’s not on prop lease the above doesn’t have a right.

  4. ” if they wish to chainsmoke, they must hermetically seal their own apartment at their own expense”
    ” you absolutely SHOULD have asked for the tenant not to smoke in his apartment”
    I’m an ex-smoker & I think invisible & traditionalmod way overstep the mark. The OP seems to be a reasonable person & you all are undermining his or her neighborly approach to a difficult situation.

  5. i have never lived in an apartment, EVER, where i can smell food inside my apartment from another apartment. in the halls, yeah, but not in the apartment, that’s just absurd, or you just live in cheap ass flimsy housing.

    *rob*

  6. Rob’s nasal epithelia were long ago massacred by smoking, so he’ll always be nonplussed that others can be so sensitive to the smell.

    I suggest you move out.

  7. food smells are just disgusting and often make people sick too.

    some people can smell babies dirty ass diapers three stories below or above.

    can we please ban cooking and babies?

    *rob*

  8. Shut it, Rob. Once again you contribute nothing.

    We have a HOUSE and I get smoke smell right through the WALL from our neighbor’s house. Anybody who lives in NYC smells how cooking smells travel through vents and gaps in walls from apt to apt. Why wouldn’t smoke??? Ask yourself that big complicated question.

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