I’m at my wits end and probably someone here can help me think out of the box.
I have a condo unit that I rent out for airbnb.
Recently the condo has stepped up security and now require to show the condo pass to enter the premises. Otherwise, guests could only enter the premises if they are authorized by the owner, whom must be present at home (security would buzz owner at home to check).
In the past I would put my condo pass in the mailbox located in the condo premises. Security would allow my guests to proceed to the mailbox to collect the pass. The condo pass has a security chip in it to access the elevator.
Nowadays, I have to be physically present to pass the pass - and it is highly inconvenient since I may have to wait for hours due to late check-in at wee hours, or delayed flight etc.
Any ideas how I could pass the pass to my guest easily?
There are no public lockers around my condo. There is a bicycle park though - I thought of parking a bike with a trunk, but I realized most bike trunks are detachable easily?
Perhaps the increased security is to prevent owners from turning their condos into short term rentals. Have you checked with your HOA rules? I might be wise to do that before potentially circumventing them.
Assuming renting via AirBnB is allowable with your Condo Association, could you just ask security to give the renter the pass? Maybe throw a few bucks their way for their time? If you are going against condo rules, then that probably wouldn’t work, but if I lived in the building too, I would rather have you give the card to security with a name of who is picking up the card, rather than leaving it out somewhere for a random person to come across.
Yeah, I stayed in an Airbnb place in May, and this is how the owner left us the keys. The lock box was mounted inconspicuously on a wall outside the gate that surrounded the property. You wouldn’t really know it was there or what it was for unless you were specifically looking for it.
I’m just going to go ahead and second this option. Or possibly a small trebuchet, properly calibrated and aimed for an X on the ground, with some Internet of Things controlling it.
Just think, “Alexa, fire the trebuchet!” It just has a nice ring to it.
Well, you could hide the key somewhere. A classic is to put it on the right front tire of an easily identified car that will be present (so maybe not your car). But you could also use a magnetic lockbox on an electrical cabinet or lamppost, or various other things that would not attract attention unless someone was instructed where to look. The key piece of info—your unit number—would not be on the keychain, as the guests would already know that.
Get the crappiest bicycle you can find.
The combination lockbox goes on the frame under the seat - NOT on the seat post.
Lock the bike when the guest is expected and provide the guest with the location of the bike rack, a description of the bike, and the combination for the lockbox.
Use a crappy bike and an* appropriate for the bike* lock - a crappy bike with a brand new high-end lock will attract attention - I assume the condo pass has markings on it to identify it as a “way to get into the condos across the street”.
A lockbox on a crappy bike just may be the bait a thief will look into.
I have tried googling but I think my google skills are too lousy - could anyone help me google the same type of lock but big enough to store a credit card-sized card?
We just sold our house, and rather than attaching the lockbox to the front doorknob, our realtor attached it to the hose bib out front. The plumbing is quite firmly attached to the house, and ours was behind a bush so it wasn’t as conspicuous.
I’m on our condo’s BoD. Our rules prohibit stuff like AirBnB.
Even if our rules did not we’d be very adverse to this stuff and be using all available legit techniques within the rules to prevent / discourage owners from doing this.
The OP says his condo has no rules against AirBnB. I’ll take him at his word, but I’d also expect the OP *might *encounter that same kind of resistance we’d put up. Which might play out as security and janitor staff pushing back, removing lock boxes, and all the rest.