I’m moving out soon and I’m thinking of moving into this beautiful pre-war building. I’m worried though about covid spreading and I’m wondering what precautions people living in apartments currently are taking.

Thing is I can find an apartment with a private entrance and in-unit wash/dryer, which would probably be better for covid, but this building is just nicer - better location, maintained better, it seems like the landlord is more present and responsive. Idk it’s a better deal, I’m just worried about covid.

You are viewing a single thread.
View all comments View context
13 points
*

yeah laundry isn’t too bad, I’m able to wear my mask. Honestly I’m more worried about covid coming in from the hallway than the shared laundry, just thought I’d mention it. The private entrance is what’s more tempting to me and why I’m sort of hesitating on this.

permalink
report
parent
reply
13 points

covid coming in from the hallway

it depends on the building im sure but i feel like a door with a seal good enough to keep your heating/cooling in is also pretty effective at keeping hall-air out. this is right out if your landlord is a cheap bastard that won’t replace a fucking draft seal ofc

permalink
report
parent
reply

Keep an air purifier by the door?

permalink
report
parent
reply

@rootsbreadandmakka@hexbear.net, actually let me expand on that. Here’s what I would do. Levoit has an air purifier that runs about $100 with Alexa capability built in. I’d put that on a little table next to the door. Then I’d get an Alexa capable door sensor and have it trigger the air purifier to turn on for an hour everytime the door opened. Your filter probably wouldn’t need replacing for years.

permalink
report
parent
reply
8 points
*

Hmm, that’s a lot more tricky, sorry comrade. I agree with the other person who replied, best solution in that case is probably an air purifier by the door. Either than or open all the windows whenever you enter, but that’s not really feasible unless you live in a very temperate climate

Edit: I just realized, if there’s a window near the door, you could also try turning your apartment into a positive pressure room via a window AC so that air only flows out when the door is opened. But I have no idea if that would actually work in practice. Just an idea.

permalink
report
parent
reply
7 points

Towel under the door? There’s generally a bit of entry space between the door and the rest of the apartment so mask up before you get to that point on the way out? You can really have an entirely safe apartment cause if it was covid proof it’d be airtight and you’d die from that. Generally though I don’t think there’s much chance of someone going through the hallway with covid and expelling enough air in front of your door for it to really matter, people don’t linger in the halls, they’re leaving their house to go outside so it’s not gonna be a major concentration of disease in the air and apartment hallways spend most of their time empty and generally have some ventilation

permalink
report
parent
reply

covid

!covid@hexbear.net

Create post

Try to include sources for posts

No Covid misinformation, including anti-vaxx, anti-mask, anti-lockdown takes.

COVID MINIMIZATION = BAN

This community is a safe space for COVID-related discussion. People who minimize/deny COVID, are anti-mask, etc… will be banned.

Off-topic posts will be removed

Jessica Wildfire’s COVID bookmark list

Covid.Tips

COVID-safe dentists: (thanks sovietknuckles)

New wastewater tracking (replacing biobot): https://data.wastewaterscan.org/tracker

Community stats

  • 474

    Monthly active users

  • 425

    Posts

  • 4.8K

    Comments