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Former tenant in China fills his flat with around 1,000kg of urine in bottles, takes staff 2 hours for clean-up

Former tenant stored bottles of urine in flat

A landlady in Zhejiang, China, recently encountered a nightmare when a former tenant stored nearly 1,000kg of urine in plastic bottles throughout her flat.

The discovery has left the landlady deeply disturbed by the property’s nauseating condition.

Landlady discovered hundreds of plastic bottles containing urine

During an interview on Wednesday (8 April), Ms Jia (name transliterated from Mandarin) explained that the tenant, a man in his 40s, had been renting the unit for nearly two years.

The situation came to light when the tenant fell behind on rent, owing over RMB 5,000 (S$930).

Source: The Paper

Ms Jia visited the apartment to change the digital lock code, only to be met with an overwhelming stench which she described as “filthy”.

She found hundreds of plastic Pepsi bottles filled with urine.

The bottles were found stuffed in cabinets and under the bed.

Walls and air conditioning unit turned yellow

In addition to the bottled waste, Ms Jia found piles of cigarette butts by the bedside.

The walls and the air conditioning unit had turned yellow from the tenant’s prolonged indoor smoking.

Source: Poster News

Clean-up took hours

Ms Jia, who has been a landlady for over a decade, stated she had never seen anything so revolting.

 

It took three people two hours just to pour the liquid down the toilet.

She revealed that the tenant is a divorcee with a sick daughter.

Source: Poster News

Ms Jia had originally planned to evict him before the Lunar New Year, but allowed him to stay out of sympathy, permitting him to delay his rent payments.

The tenant has since promised to pay the outstanding rent and an RMB 500 (S$93) cleaning fee.

Also read: Landlady in Thailand shocked after tenant leaves rental unit filled with rubbish & used sanitary pads

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Featured image adapted from The Paper and Poster News.

Thanawut Fasaisirinan

When faced with boredom, Bank lets the notes of music and the pull of gaming fill the empty hours.

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Thanawut Fasaisirinan