While the legal principles are similar statewide, the day-to-day facts we see in West Chicago tend to follow common patterns:
- High turnover in multi-unit housing. When tenants change frequently, maintenance requests and repair follow-through can get lost—especially for handrails, step edges, and lighting.
- Busy commercial sidewalks and building entries. Entrances used by commuters and customers experience heavier wear-and-tear, plus faster “cleanup vs. documentation” decisions after an incident.
- Weather exposure around entrances. Even if the fall happened indoors, tracking how a building handled wet conditions (salt, tracked moisture, cleaning schedules) can matter for proving the cause.
- Construction and remodeling seasons. Temporary repairs, partial renovations, and changes to lighting or flooring can create new hazards on stairs and landings.
These details matter because insurers often argue that the condition wasn’t dangerous or that the injury is unrelated. A West Chicago lawyer focuses on building a clean timeline tying the stair condition to what happened to you.


