Tenants at the Lamoreaux Gardens apartment complex in Hamilton created a zine to document systemic problems within their building [1].

The project serves as a collective record of living conditions, transforming individual grievances into a public document to pressure management for improvements.

Led by artist Sonali Menezes, the tenant association titled the publication "Welcome to Lamoreaux Gardens" [1]. The zine focuses on chronic maintenance failures that residents said have gone unaddressed. Specific issues documented in the publication include pest infestations, leaking pipes, and overflowing garbage [1].

By utilizing a zine format, the residents are using art as a tool for advocacy. The publication allows the community to share evidence of the building's deterioration in a way that is more accessible and visible than individual maintenance requests, a strategy designed to bring attention to the shared struggle of the residents.

"The tenant association of a Hamilton apartment complex created Welcome to Lamoreaux Gardens," a CBC News reporter said [1].

The effort highlights a growing trend of tenants organizing through creative media to fight for better housing standards. By documenting the specific failures of the complex, the association aims to create a permanent record of the conditions they face daily [1].

"Welcome to Lamoreaux Gardens"

The use of a zine for housing advocacy represents a shift from traditional legal complaints to community-based storytelling. By documenting issues like pest infestations and leaking pipes in a public format, tenants are attempting to create social pressure and a historical record of negligence that can be used to mobilize other residents or attract regulatory attention.