The $53,000 Haddadi Apartment — Hidden Fees in a Quiet Mail Room


The Haddadi apartment, valued around $53,000, carries its quiet story in a corner once used to organize building deliveries. On the narrow desk, envelopes labeled fees remain stacked beside the ledger where small payments were recorded.

Nabil Haddadi, Package Coordinator

Nabil Haddadi, born 1980 in Casablanca, worked informally as a package coordinator for residents in the building.

Eight traces of his routine remain: a ring of spare mailbox keys; a handheld barcode scanner; a ledger listing package arrivals; a bundle of delivery receipts; a wall calendar marking pickup dates; a small digital scale used for weighing parcels; a notebook of apartment numbers; and the envelopes marked fees collected for holding deliveries.
Each afternoon he sorted parcels into the mail slots and logged them in the ledger. Residents picked up packages during the evening and left small handling fees on the desk.

Deliveries Redirected

When a new courier locker system was installed nearby, most deliveries were rerouted. The ledger shows fewer entries until the final page ends mid-week. The envelopes of fees were never deposited anywhere.

Back in the small mail room, the envelopes labeled fees remain on the desk beside the ledger.
The apartment sits modest and quiet, its improvised mail room intact, with the final delivery records and hidden fees waiting where the last package was logged.

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