![]() |
(Photo: Superstock) |
Ever since investors bought the Apthorp (former home to Al Pacino and Nora Ephron) three years ago with the intent of taking it condo, the gracious Upper West Side building’s residents have gotten a bit edgy over higher rents and evictions. So when the management recently requested that residents remove their doormats, alleging they were a “tripping hazard,” the tenants association fought back. They sent a letter calling the request “capricious” and “without any basis.” “There are all kinds of apartment buildings,” the association’s letter asserted, “and not a single one of them has ever had such a rule put in place.” But a management spokesperson explained that “in order to proceed with the beautification of the hallways, naturally, things need to get out of the way,” adding that the real problem was bikes in the hall. Eventually, “They’ll be getting these gorgeous new mats.”


Email
Print
How an Academy Award Is Won
Q&A: Megan Mullally and Nick Offerman
Is ChatRoulette the Future of the Web?
A Lost Fan Worries She’s Lost Her Faith
At the Meatball Shop, Comfort Food Reigns
Cloying Southern Food at Tipsy Parson
Two Locals Pick Their Top Hell's Kitchen Spots
Look Book: The Yoga Teacher 
The Rise and Fall of NY1's Dominic Carter
Is Democracy Killing Democracy?
Why the Olympics Won't Change the World