trends in dysfunctional America blow in and they blow out. Here's a few that recently blew in (feel free to add) . . .
Room To Let
Lisa Marion, in one of two rooms in her Toronto apartment that she rents out using Airbnb, a San Francisco start-up.
Lisa Marion, in one of two rooms in her Toronto apartment that she rents out using Airbnb, a San Francisco start-up.
When Lisa Marion’s roommates moved out of her apartment in Toronto in February, she scrambled to find replacements. But instead of finding one or two, she found 30.
Ms. Marion, 26, has been using Airbnb, a Web site that streamlines the process of renting out her extra bedrooms to travelers. The service has unexpectedly turned her into a bed-and-breakfast owner, bringing in roughly $1,800 a month, a nice cushion as she works on starting her own business.
“It pays my rent with a little left over,” she said. “I’ve been able to upgrade my place, paint and get new furniture, which in turn means I can charge more.”
But those who choose to welcome strangers into their homes in this way must be prepared to deal with more than just changing towels.
Hosts may run into trouble if their neighbors, or worse, their landlords become aware of their rotating houseguests and disapprove.
Such short-term rentals are considered illegal in some New York City buildings, according to the Buildings Department. The city says that this year it is on pace to more than double the 483 complaints about such activity that it received last year.
Then there is the unpredictability of the guests themselves.
Ms. Marion, 26, has been using Airbnb, a Web site that streamlines the process of renting out her extra bedrooms to travelers. The service has unexpectedly turned her into a bed-and-breakfast owner, bringing in roughly $1,800 a month, a nice cushion as she works on starting her own business.
“It pays my rent with a little left over,” she said. “I’ve been able to upgrade my place, paint and get new furniture, which in turn means I can charge more.”
But those who choose to welcome strangers into their homes in this way must be prepared to deal with more than just changing towels.
Hosts may run into trouble if their neighbors, or worse, their landlords become aware of their rotating houseguests and disapprove.
Such short-term rentals are considered illegal in some New York City buildings, according to the Buildings Department. The city says that this year it is on pace to more than double the 483 complaints about such activity that it received last year.
Then there is the unpredictability of the guests themselves.
Geeks Aglow
Airbnb, which says it is handling 10,000 guests a night, is at the center of a boom in new companies that are creating a market for places to stay — a spare room, a house when the owners are on vacation or even a backyard treehouse.
Some of these businesses are riding the surge of interest in all kinds of Web ventures; Airbnb plans to announce on Monday that it has raised $112 million from investors. Last month, Wimdu, a similar venture in Europe, raised $90 million. Smaller competitors like 9flats, Roomarama and iStopOver are also hoping to take a bite of the short-term rental market.
These companies say they are helping hosts like Ms. Marion become microentrepreneurs, while giving adventurous travelers insights into how local residents live, whether they are visiting Japan or Los Angeles.
“We started realizing there is a growing trend of people who are doing this and making a living on Airbnb,” said Brian Chesky, who founded the company in 2008 with Joe Gebbia and Nathan Blecharczyk. “That’s what turned this into a movement and tipped it into the mainstream.”
Nathan Blecharczyk, left, Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia founded Airbnb in 2008.
To use Airbnb, site visitors search for listings in their destination city. Once they have found a place, they can send a message to the host with any questions about the room or its location. They then pay for the stay in full using a credit card or PayPal. Airbnb holds the money until a day after guests check in, ensuring that they are not swindled out of their cash. The site makes money by charging a transaction fee for each reservation.
Much has been made of the Internet’s power to eliminate middlemen, like travel agents or real estate brokers. But in easing transactions, short-term rental sites are useful middlemen in a market that would not otherwise exist on a global scale. Similar sites are popping up to rent other goods; NeighborGoods and SnapGoods list things like ski equipment and power tools, and Getaround, a start-up in the Bay Area, connects car owners with people who want to rent cars.
Fans of Airbnb and its competitors say the drawbacks of staying in a stranger’s home, or letting one into yours, are offset by the advantages. Hosts can make money to help with or even cover the cost of rent or mortgage payments.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/25/te...tml?ref=global
Some of these businesses are riding the surge of interest in all kinds of Web ventures; Airbnb plans to announce on Monday that it has raised $112 million from investors. Last month, Wimdu, a similar venture in Europe, raised $90 million. Smaller competitors like 9flats, Roomarama and iStopOver are also hoping to take a bite of the short-term rental market.
These companies say they are helping hosts like Ms. Marion become microentrepreneurs, while giving adventurous travelers insights into how local residents live, whether they are visiting Japan or Los Angeles.
“We started realizing there is a growing trend of people who are doing this and making a living on Airbnb,” said Brian Chesky, who founded the company in 2008 with Joe Gebbia and Nathan Blecharczyk. “That’s what turned this into a movement and tipped it into the mainstream.”
Nathan Blecharczyk, left, Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia founded Airbnb in 2008.
Much has been made of the Internet’s power to eliminate middlemen, like travel agents or real estate brokers. But in easing transactions, short-term rental sites are useful middlemen in a market that would not otherwise exist on a global scale. Similar sites are popping up to rent other goods; NeighborGoods and SnapGoods list things like ski equipment and power tools, and Getaround, a start-up in the Bay Area, connects car owners with people who want to rent cars.
Fans of Airbnb and its competitors say the drawbacks of staying in a stranger’s home, or letting one into yours, are offset by the advantages. Hosts can make money to help with or even cover the cost of rent or mortgage payments.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/25/te...tml?ref=global
Bummed About the Long Drive to Your Kid's Summer Camp?
For decades, parents in the Northeast who sent their children to summer camp faced the same arduous logistics of traveling long distances to remote towns in Maine, New Hampshire and upstate New York to pick up their children or to attend parents’ visiting day.
Now, even as the economy limps along, more of the nation’s wealthier families are cutting out the car ride and chartering planes to fly to summer camps. One private jet broker, Todd Rome of Blue Star Jets, said his summer-camp business had jumped 30 percent over the last year.
This weekend, a popular choice for visiting day at camps, private planes jammed the runways at small rural airports.
Officials at the airport in Augusta said 51 private planes arrived between Thursday and Saturday; on a normal day, they would expect just a few. The airport was so busy that one of its two public runways was closed so all the incoming planes would have someplace to park, said Dale Kilmer, operations manager for Maine Instrument Flight, which operates the airport.
“We have 50 to 60 jets up here in just that one day,” Mr. Kilmer said. “It’s a madhouse because they all leave at the same time, between 4 p.m. and 6 p.m.”
At Sullivan County Airport in Bethel, N.Y., roughly 40 percent of recent flights have carried families heading to summer camp. Officials at Laconia Municipal Airport in Gilford, N.H., and Moultonborough Airport in Moultonborough, N.H., reported similar numbers.
At Robert Lafleur Airport in Waterville, which is close to many of the private camps in the Belgrade Lake region of Maine, the assistant manager, Randy Marshall, brought on two extra people to help handle the traffic last weekend.
In Augusta, Mr. Kilmer usually creates a temporary lounge on parents’ weekend for the pilots and flight attendants who must wait for their clients to return from their children’s camps, so that they can depart later that afternoon. He has already received catering orders for return flights, which include fruit and sandwich trays for adults and sandwich boxes for younger siblings. One flier has already requested a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, a fruit cup with a single strawberry, a juice box, a banana and a cookie or brownie.
The popularity of private-plane travel is forcing many high-priced camps, where seven-week sessions can easily cost more than $10,000, to balance the habits of their parents against the ethos of simplicity the camps spend the summer promoting.
But some parents have already tired of this private-plane status infiltrating the simpler world of summer camp. “It’s a crazy world out there,” added Nancy Chemtob, a divorce lawyer,. She now sends her children to camp in Europe.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/25/ny...ef=todayspaper
Now, even as the economy limps along, more of the nation’s wealthier families are cutting out the car ride and chartering planes to fly to summer camps. One private jet broker, Todd Rome of Blue Star Jets, said his summer-camp business had jumped 30 percent over the last year.
This weekend, a popular choice for visiting day at camps, private planes jammed the runways at small rural airports.
Officials at the airport in Augusta said 51 private planes arrived between Thursday and Saturday; on a normal day, they would expect just a few. The airport was so busy that one of its two public runways was closed so all the incoming planes would have someplace to park, said Dale Kilmer, operations manager for Maine Instrument Flight, which operates the airport.
“We have 50 to 60 jets up here in just that one day,” Mr. Kilmer said. “It’s a madhouse because they all leave at the same time, between 4 p.m. and 6 p.m.”
At Sullivan County Airport in Bethel, N.Y., roughly 40 percent of recent flights have carried families heading to summer camp. Officials at Laconia Municipal Airport in Gilford, N.H., and Moultonborough Airport in Moultonborough, N.H., reported similar numbers.
At Robert Lafleur Airport in Waterville, which is close to many of the private camps in the Belgrade Lake region of Maine, the assistant manager, Randy Marshall, brought on two extra people to help handle the traffic last weekend.
In Augusta, Mr. Kilmer usually creates a temporary lounge on parents’ weekend for the pilots and flight attendants who must wait for their clients to return from their children’s camps, so that they can depart later that afternoon. He has already received catering orders for return flights, which include fruit and sandwich trays for adults and sandwich boxes for younger siblings. One flier has already requested a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, a fruit cup with a single strawberry, a juice box, a banana and a cookie or brownie.
The popularity of private-plane travel is forcing many high-priced camps, where seven-week sessions can easily cost more than $10,000, to balance the habits of their parents against the ethos of simplicity the camps spend the summer promoting.
But some parents have already tired of this private-plane status infiltrating the simpler world of summer camp. “It’s a crazy world out there,” added Nancy Chemtob, a divorce lawyer,. She now sends her children to camp in Europe.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/25/ny...ef=todayspaper
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