"Under applicable law,” says attorney Aaron Shmulewitz, a partner with the New York law firm of Belkin Burden Wenig & Goldman, LLP, “it is the obligation of the cooperative, as owner of the building, to provide a working, secure entrance door to the apartment, including at least one lock and a peephole. A shareholder, as tenant of the apartment, has the right to add an additional lock at his/her expense, but must provide a key to the cooperative. If the special lock, handle, mail slot and hinges on the prior door are not standard building equipment and were installed by the shareholder (or a predecessor), then the cooperative would be within its rights to require that the shareholder pay for their replacement. However, if those accessories are standard features in this building, then the co-op (and not the shareholder) must pay for them.”
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