In a community with lots of multi-unit housing and busy pedestrian activity, stairwell and entryway hazards show up in predictable ways:
- Apartment and condo stairwells: worn tread surfaces, loose handrails, missing or inconsistent lighting, cluttered landings, and delayed repairs after tenant complaints.
- Community entrances and exterior steps: rain or irrigation overspray creating slick conditions, broken step edges, or poor signage/warnings during maintenance.
- Workplace entrances for commuters and shift workers: construction staging, temporary lighting, or changes to walkways that make safe footing harder.
- Public-facing businesses and delivery-heavy locations: boxes, carts, and debris left near stair access—sometimes briefly, but long enough to create a hazard.
If your fall happened in one of these settings, the details that matter are often the same: what the stairs looked like, whether anyone had notice, and how the condition connects to your injuries.


