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14 votes
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Homeownership can bring out the worst in you
14 votes -
Nesting as prepping
10 votes -
After the Florida building collapse, condos struggle to fund big repairs
11 votes -
Majority of Florida condo board quit in 2019 as squabbling residents dragged out plans for repairs
19 votes -
Sweden's parliament has passed a vote of no confidence in Prime Minister Stefan Löfven – Socialdemokraterna leader has a week to resign or call a snap election
7 votes -
Sweden's Vänsterpartiet said it would seek to oust PM Stefan Löfven if the government didn't drop or change plans for the abolition of rent controls on new-build properties
7 votes -
Plans for an artificial island to house 35,000 people and protect the port of Copenhagen from rising sea levels have been approved by Danish MPs
8 votes -
The end of "The End of San Francisco"
9 votes -
The city dwellers trying to build a tight-knit community from scratch
8 votes -
I'm moving, in the EU, from Hungary to The Netherlands. Any tips?
Inspired by (or if you prefer, ripping off) @spit-evil-olive-tips ' moving thread. I'm a US expat with Hungarian citizenship, moving with two native Hungarian friends (plus a dog and 2 cats), to...
Inspired by (or if you prefer, ripping off) @spit-evil-olive-tips ' moving thread.
I'm a US expat with Hungarian citizenship, moving with two native Hungarian friends (plus a dog and 2 cats), to The Hague. We have an apartment there, all 3 animals are chipped and vaccinated (and we 3 are not...). My cousin will be driving us there in about a month.
We already have an appointment, a couple days after the move, to register our BRPs and BSNs at the local govt office. Sooner would be better, but it must be done in person, and right now, I don't relish the idea of a 2nd trip across the EU just to get registered a bit faster.
I'm primarily looking for tips on smoothly integrating into Dutch society ... utilities, banking, health care, whatever else I'm forgetting to worry about. But I'm open to any tips regarding any aspect of moving between countries in the EU, in the middle of a poorly-managed global pandemic.
Side-note for the entrepreneurs: In the US, you can rent a car, truck or trailer anywhere, drive it to anywhere else ... and leave it there. I appreciate the added complexities of an int'l version of that service, but if anyone can be the first to resolve those challenges in the EU ... $$$. Or rather, €€€.
ETA: Any advice posted to @spit-evil-olive-tips thread need not be repeated here.
19 votes -
Facing a housing crunch almost a century ago, Stockholm built 'barnrikehus' for low-income families – today they are some of the city's more sought-after properties
9 votes -
China's reckoning (Part 2/3): Housing crisis
3 votes -
Kansas City's homeless camps rise as protests
10 votes -
‘The Secret Apartment’ is the story of a Vietnam vet who claims to have lived in Veterans Stadium for years
9 votes -
How socialists solved the housing crisis of Vienna after WW1 and how we can do it again
10 votes -
Swedish officials have joined Danish critics in registering concerns that an island-building plan, a signature test of Copenhagen's development model, could have risks
6 votes -
Where would you live if you had no ties to where you are now?
The US emigration thread brought back a lot of thoughts I've had about leaving the UK, and I imagine a decent number of us have at least idly wondered about a serious move - especially after a...
The US emigration thread brought back a lot of thoughts I've had about leaving the UK, and I imagine a decent number of us have at least idly wondered about a serious move - especially after a year like we've just had.
For me, the difficulty has always been figuring out where to go: politics/climate/healthcare/lifestyle/language are a delicate balancing act, and I don't think anywhere's a slam dunk. Everyone's going to have their own take on what perfect looks like, and what compromises to make mapping that to the real world!
So let's assume you're packed and ready to go, nothing holding you back. You've still got to navigate inbound immigration, handle the language, find a job, all that good stuff - but the world is your oyster. Where would you choose to go?
16 votes -
Do any other US citizens think of emigrating?
I'm a 23 year old male originally from Southern California, and like the title says I'm curious to see if anyone else near my demographic has seriously looked into emmigrating in light of the past...
I'm a 23 year old male originally from Southern California, and like the title says I'm curious to see if anyone else near my demographic has seriously looked into emmigrating in light of the past year and a half.
What factors motivate you to move?
What would be an ideal location for you?
What timeline would are you looking at?One of the main motivators I seek to emmigrate is climate change. As the world continues to progress and evolve I do not think the United States will be able to equitabbly address the changing landscape and ways of life. As for when I would want to move, I'm not sure; currently it seems like a far off probability, but I know it's a choice I will have to make in my own lifetime.
33 votes -
The bullshit economy pt. 1 - Homebuying help
13 votes -
Google submits plans to build 7,000 homes in North Bayshore, the largest project in city's history
11 votes -
The downside to life in a supertall tower: Leaks, creaks, breaks
16 votes -
Bakersfield, California just ended chronic homelessness
11 votes -
A beginner’s guide to Italian ghost towns selling houses for €1
22 votes -
'Flexing their power': How America's richest zip code stays exclusive
8 votes -
Jreg (Greg Guevara) has recently "toured" his apartment and people are genuinely getting concerned about his mental health and wellbeing
Admittedly the forcibly neutral headline should probably be changed. The video has been unlisted but this is the link. One important thing to note is that he recently made a video satirizing how...
Admittedly the forcibly neutral headline should probably be changed.
The video has been unlisted but this is the link. One important thing to note is that he recently made a video satirizing how people pretend your life condition doesn't affect your mental health implies that wasn't satire, which is incredibly concerning.
He deleted the comment where he talks about his landlord but it has been screenshotted here. It's also proof that's actually where he lives.
Someone has unironically compiled how that house violates Canadian/Ontarian legislation
r/jreg is in some mix of meme-ing and genuine concern.
9 votes -
Logging in to get kicked out: Inside America's virtual eviction crisis
7 votes -
Evictions have led to 10,000 additional COVID deaths
12 votes -
Canada housing squeeze: Buyers moving up 'handcuffed' by hard-to-sell condos
5 votes -
The case against single family zoning
7 votes -
Breadtube vs economics #1: Response to Philosophy Tube on housing
13 votes -
How did Soviet planners design the Union's cities?
9 votes -
Thousands of DC renters are evicted every year. Do they all know to show up to court?
10 votes -
The rat tribe: Meet the million migrant workers living beneath Beijing's streets
7 votes -
How Reykjavik's sheet-metal homes beat the Icelandic winter – they may be unorthodox, but the innovative buildings have kept residents warm and dry for more than a century
13 votes -
Why we don't like our underground house
11 votes -
Amazon Alexa for Residential will let the voice assistant power apartment complexes
15 votes -
How Covid reveals the ghoulish reality behind anti homeless propaganda
11 votes -
Google proposes new village next to Mountain View tech hubs
5 votes -
Donald Trump administration announces nationwide US eviction moratorium through end of the year
16 votes -
The eco-yogi slumlords of Brooklyn
6 votes -
Home ownership is the West’s biggest economic-policy mistake. It is an obsession that undermines growth, fairness and public faith in capitalism leaders
23 votes -
Facing eviction, residents of Denmark's 'ghettos' are suing the government – evictions part of a sweeping plan to rid the country of immigrant-heavy areas by 2030
8 votes -
The 2020 San Francisco exodus is real, and historic, report shows
19 votes -
How does it feel living in a crypt? Impressions of one year later.
11 votes -
Denmark’s 300-year-old homes of the future – thatched with a seaweed that has the potential to be a contemporary building material
6 votes -
Denmark is a liberal paradise for many people, but the reality is very different for immigrants
20 votes -
2020 is the summer of booming home sales — and evictions
6 votes -
Let's window shop for French fairytale homes
9 votes -
Zillow now displays LGBT non-discrimination laws on homes
4 votes