The Brightwood property now for sale, shortly after tenants began a rent strike. (Photo by Natalie Delgadillo / DCist)
The owner of a decrepit apartment building in Brightwood Park, Michael Lesesne, has listed the property for sale shortly after tenants started a rent strike to protest what they’ve said are unlivable conditions.
Bisnow was the first to report on the listing.
The rent strike started on October 1, and tenants held a rally in support of the strike earlier this month. At the rally, residents described living with bedbugs, cockroaches, and rats; swollen, leaking ceilings; and persistent, widespread mold growth in their units. Instead of paying rent to their landlord, tenants in 16 of the building’s 24 units have begun depositing their rent payments into an escrow account managed by the Latino Economic Development Center, an advocacy organization that has helped tenants organize other rent strikes in D.C.
One tenant, Yésika Chicas, let me inside her apartment. Some photos of her bathroom, which she says is the worst part of her place: pic.twitter.com/VCxKgYIOdl
— Natalie Delgadillo (@ndelgadillo07) October 12, 2018
Lesesne has listed the property for $3.1 million.
Bisnow reports that Lesesne’s family has owned the building since 1981, and Lesesne himself lived in it for 20 years. The property owner was diagnosed with cancer in 2012, which has affected his ability to care for the property and nudged him toward listing it for sale, according to the outlet.
Broker Marcus & Millichap is working with Lesesne on the sale. Marty Zupancic of the firm told Bisnow that the building is not in the kind of condition that tenants have described.
“For a property that’s, according to the tenants, in that bad a condition, it certainly has a high occupancy level,” Zupancic said to the outlet (23 of the 24 units are occupied). “You’d anticipate maybe half the building wouldn’t be there or at least 25 percent, so to have it 96 percent occupied for something in that bad a condition, that seems slightly odd.”
Rob Wohl, a tenant organizing manager at LEDC, says the sale is positive news for tenants.
“It suggests that [the rent strike] is pretty successful. This building should have been sold a long time ago—the owner is clearly not interested in investing in it and keeping it up to code,” Wohl says. “We’re not doing a victory lap yet, because Lesesne still owns the building and it could be on the market a long time. But it’s good.”
Previously:
Facing Decrepit Conditions, Another D.C. Apartment Building Goes On Rent Strike
Natalie Delgadillo