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25 votes
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How does Paris stay Paris? By pouring billions into public housing.
17 votes -
Atlanta’s squatter problem is vexing Wall Street landlords
24 votes -
In defense of squatting - the community utility of squatting in a world of algorithmic landlord collusion
25 votes -
350,000 Californians are now on the FAIR Plan, the last resort for fire insurance. Now what?
36 votes -
Muji has a prescription for the loneliness epidemic in Japan
10 votes -
Why small developers are getting squeezed out of the housing market
18 votes -
Price fixing by algorithm is still price fixing
59 votes -
Arizona attorney general sues landlords and software company RealPage Inc over 'astronomical' apartment rent hikes
34 votes -
Leasing like a state, or: public housing is development policy
7 votes -
House hunting tips for a millennial who's never owned one
I'm starting the process of looking to buy a house. My partner uses a power wheelchair and anything we buy is going to need to be accessible or modifiable. So I know we're looking for a ranch,...
I'm starting the process of looking to buy a house. My partner uses a power wheelchair and anything we buy is going to need to be accessible or modifiable. So I know we're looking for a ranch, probably 3/2 at most is what will be affordable but I'm finalizing my pre-approval now.
That said... I'm almost 40 and I've never bought a house before. What are some things I need to know when looking at a house? I have a realtor and we're looking at our first place tomorrow. I'm bringing a measuring tape because the accessibility will matter.
But I don't even know where to start and what the normal questions are!48 votes -
What Texas can teach San Francisco and London about building houses: it’s not a housing crisis — it’s a planning crisis
13 votes -
The hottest trend in US cities? Changing zoning rules to allow more housing.
42 votes -
Berkeley's upzoning would be among America's largest
20 votes -
Demonstrators claim lack of affordable housing in Gaeltacht region threatens the survival of the Irish language
13 votes -
What if US public housing were for everyone?
29 votes -
Iceland plans to buy out home owners in volcano-struck town of Grindavík – total cost of the buyout could be as much as $440 million
20 votes -
UBC student flies to school from Calgary (because Vancouver is that unaffordable to live in)
31 votes -
The relative share of Americans living in the West of the US has declined
21 votes -
Why we can’t build family-sized apartments in North America
33 votes -
The man in room 117 – Andrey Shevelyov would rather live on the street than take antipsychotic medication. Should it be his decision to make?
21 votes -
Palm Springs capped Airbnb rentals. Now some home prices are in free-fall.
49 votes -
I rent a million-dollar home: Why can’t I buy one?
27 votes -
HomeVestors (the “We Buy Ugly Houses” company) overhauls policies in the wake of ProPublica investigation
19 votes -
Canada announces cap on international students for next two years
29 votes -
The case for American single-stair multifamily
26 votes -
Russia’s fabled war ally ‘General Frost’ turns on Moscow
16 votes -
Iceland keeps feeding its tourist boom. Will it push locals out? – about six times as many visitors as residents came to the tiny island last year
8 votes -
Inside the world's highest tech prison - HMP Fosse Way
12 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg is building a top-secret compound in Hawai'i
32 votes -
Satellite images show China building houses on Bhutan's territory
10 votes -
The old new way to provide cheap housing
18 votes -
America isn’t ready for the two-household child
26 votes -
Minneapolis has a YIMBY message for America: Build more houses and get rid of suburban-style zoning and inflation will disappear
28 votes -
Not your grandma’s granny flat: How San Diego hacked state housing law to build ADU ‘apartment buildings’
16 votes -
Joe Biden administration offers $35 billion in low-interest loans to support US transit-oriented development
24 votes -
Solar power to the people: California program brings clean energy to Oakland
11 votes -
US increased number of limited liability company landlords leads to difficulty requesting repairs, increased evictions
32 votes -
Graduated and moving to an apartment in a major city in the US, advice/tips?
I graduated in the spring and spent the last few months at home with family. I'm hoping to find an apartment/job in a major US city working as a legal assistant or paralegal. I've never rented...
I graduated in the spring and spent the last few months at home with family. I'm hoping to find an apartment/job in a major US city working as a legal assistant or paralegal.
I've never rented before, so I have questions, but due to circumstances related to the ones pushing me away from staying at home any longer, I don't have any parents or older siblings to ask for help, so I'm hoping to crowdsource wisdom here. I have specific questions, but also happy to hear any general advice for someone renting an apartment for the first time.
Some relevant context:
- Studio apartment is nonnegotiable. I don't know anyone I trust enough to be my roommate. If that weren't enough, I'm one of the only people still wearing a mask and trying not to get COVID, so it's gotta be a studio for me to be able to relax.
- I'm looking for a walkable neighborhood and good public transit in addition to affordability, so really looking at Chicago and Philly right now.
- I love to cook, but I know studios often have really lackluster kitchens. Hoping to find one with a usable amount of counterspace.
Those questions I had:
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If you offer to pay a landlord the cost of the lease in full, is it typical for the landlord to waive the requirement that you provide proof of employment, or if you asked them to waive that, would they be likely to say yes? I would really like to take some time off, and coming home was intended to be that, but toxic family means I've just been stressed the whole time, so being able to get a place without needing a job right off the bat would be a fantastic setup to make sure this new start goes well. (If I save up part-time earnings for the next 2-3 months, I'll have enough to pay a lease on a $1200 studio in full, furnish it with the necessities, and feed myself.)
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Recently I realized that when apartments are listed as unfurnished, that means no bed or mattress either. (I kind of see now why futons are a thing.) How do people usually address this issue? Do you buy a mattress and bed frame with the expectation that you'll take it with you whenever you move out to the next apartment?
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Since I don't live in the city I'll be moving to, I most likely won't be able to see the apartment in person before committing. Any particular ideas on how I could handle this or what I should be wary of? I've heard of services where you can pay someone to show up to a tour and video call you so you can follow along (https://www.gandertour.com/). $50 doesn't seem too steep, but I don't know if that specific service is trustworthy, or if there's a cheaper or simpler way to deal with this.
Those are my questions, and like I said above, any advice not 100% related to these questions is welcome too!
38 votes -
Why HOAs are everywhere now
27 votes -
Denmark aims a wrecking ball at ‘non-Western’ neighborhoods
42 votes -
NYC homeowner costs are rising at three times the inflation rate
20 votes -
It’s official: The era of China’s global dominance is over
22 votes -
A historical view of residential co-ops
11 votes -
Prolific LA eviction law firm was caught faking cases in court
13 votes -
As rooftop solar debate flares, builders, landlords and renter advocates are taking sides
15 votes -
The rent is too damn algorithmic - Washington DC attorney general is investigating RealPage, a company that helps landlords set rent prices, for potential antitrust violations
36 votes -
What six months of Denver’s Basic Income Project tells us
50 votes -
Can NYC ease housing costs with ‘City of Yes’ proposal?
14 votes -
A closer look at Kowloon Walled City in Hong Kong, the most densely populated place that ever existed
40 votes