San Francisco says tiny sleeping 'pods,' which cost $700 a month and became a big hit with tech workers, are not up to code (www.businessinsider.com)
from L4s@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:00
https://lemmy.world/post/6404731

San Francisco says tiny sleeping ‘pods,’ which cost $700 a month and became a big hit with tech workers, are not up to code::The pods, which are 4-foot-high boxes constructed from wood and steel, made headlines after tech workers praised the spaces.

#technology

threaded - newest

autotldr@lemmings.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:00 next collapse

This is the best summary I could come up with:


Tiny sleeping “pods,” which have proved a hit with San Francisco’s tech community, are not up to code, city officials said.

Representatives for the San Francisco Department of Building Inspection did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment, made outside normal working hours.

The pods, which are 4-foot-high boxes constructed from wood and steel, made headlines after tech workers praised the spaces in interviews with ABC 7 News.

Brownstone CEO James Stallworth told SFGate the company had a lot of inquiries from people interested in artificial intelligence.

Earlier this month, Christian Lewis, a tech-startup founder, posted photos of his experience in one of the pods on X, formerly known as Twitter.

i’m just trying to stay within the city of San Francisco without paying $4,000 a month or getting stabbed, and i think this is a great solution so far," he wrote.


The original article contains 281 words, the summary contains 143 words. Saved 49%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

jordanlund@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:05 next collapse

$700 / 30 = $23.33 a day to sleep in a wood box… brilliant!

gloriousspearfish@feddit.dk on 06 Oct 2023 18:22 next collapse

And when your are done, you get to sleep in one for free.

foggy@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:27 next collapse

lol someone has never bought a coffin and it shows.

gloriousspearfish@feddit.dk on 06 Oct 2023 18:28 next collapse

Yes, you are right. But no way in hell am I going to pay for my own coffin.

foggy@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:30 collapse

That’s what you think.

You can’t take that money with ya!

gloriousspearfish@feddit.dk on 06 Oct 2023 18:38 collapse

I won’t leave any, ha.

ramblinguy@sh.itjust.works on 06 Oct 2023 20:01 collapse

What happens to bodies that can’t pay burial or cremation costs? Do they just get thrown into a compost bin?

AlataOrange@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 20:22 collapse

In most cases, local governments use direct cremation to dispose of unclaimed bodies and the cremains are stored for a set period of time. After being stored the cremains may be scattered. The Cremation Society of North America has estimated that there are currently 2 million unclaimed cremated remains in the U.S.

Some counties elect to bury unclaimed bodies. Typically, the body is buried in an unmarked grave that is county-owned. If a family member later comes forward the body may be exhumed upon request.

Other states allow for unclaimed bodies to be donated for medical science. There are also state laws that allow for the unclaimed bodies of veterans to be buried by third party groups.

Source: Direct Cremation

This is for unclaimed bodies, if your body is claimed by your family then the cost is taken out of your estate or your family have to pay for it.

cantstopthesignal@sh.itjust.works on 06 Oct 2023 18:57 next collapse

Just throw me in the trash

[deleted] on 06 Oct 2023 19:50 collapse

.

Fishytricks@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:36 next collapse

Dying isn’t free either

AlataOrange@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 20:20 collapse

You wish it was free, not on your life bud.

scarabic@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 22:16 collapse

One of the other articles linked has a photo of the common room.

sfexaminer.com/…/article_a8459fe2-62ec-11ee-acab-…

This is a dormitory style shared living space with living area and bathrooms / shower. The “boxes” are bunks for sleeping and actually roomy and private compared to every other dorm bunk I’ve ever seen.

jollyrogue@lemmy.ml on 06 Oct 2023 18:07 next collapse

Ugh. Bougie homeless. Just sleep in your car like normal people. 🙄 /s

I do want sleep pods at airports.

naonintendois@programming.dev on 06 Oct 2023 18:18 next collapse

Shower pod at the Paris airport was the best layover I’ve ever had. You pay in 30 minute increments but so nice to get refreshed when you’re traveling across the Atlantic.

SatansMaggotyCumFart@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 19:16 next collapse

I would have a thirty minute shower than.

jollyrogue@lemmy.ml on 06 Oct 2023 19:50 collapse

Wow, 30min is really generous.

I bet that was really nice. 🙂 As someone who takes red eyes, showering when I get there would be preferred.

Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 19:27 collapse

San Franciscan here. What is “car?”

jollyrogue@lemmy.ml on 06 Oct 2023 19:32 next collapse

A mobile home. Don’t worry you’ll be able to rent one from Uber for the night soon enough.

agitatedpotato@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 Oct 2023 19:48 next collapse

Well in San Francisco, a car is something that a robot learns how to navigate around the city streets.

Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 21:13 collapse

All of our robots just sit in the middle of intersections. What are these navigating robots you speak of?

borkdd@lemmynsfw.com on 07 Oct 2023 00:30 next collapse

They’re the big boxes in the road with broken windows

Railing5132@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 02:44 collapse

But that’s not important right now

AssPennies@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 08:59 collapse

They’re things on the road that take you to your abode.

flamingo_pinyata@sopuli.xyz on 06 Oct 2023 18:11 next collapse

As someone who’s not American and had a couple of job opportunities to move to San Francisco, I’m glad not to have done it.

What kind of hellhole is that city? I had an impression it was extremely expensive but also very wealthy. The more I hear the worse it seems.

bitsplease@lemmy.ml on 06 Oct 2023 18:29 next collapse

had an impression it was extremely expensive but also very wealthy.

The trouble with these kinds of statements is that there are always going to be “bottom of the ladder” workers who are still poor in these cities, and being poor in am expensive city is a shit load worse than being poor anywhere else

Even then, salaries are high, but the CoL more or less cancels it out. Even the wealthy SWEs I know who live in SF are barely able to swing 2 bedroom apartments that they share with an SO. That’s why you hear about new grads making $200k/year right out of college working for Meta or Google, it’s true, but you’d be better off in a lot of ways working for a small company in Sacramento for $100k

robocall@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:30 next collapse

I like the city but it’s not for everyone. I definitely wouldn’t call it a hellhole.

vector_zero@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:37 next collapse

It’s expensive because of the concentration of wealth, not the quality of the area. There’s a ton of crime, homelessness, car break ins, etc.

People often leave their car doors unlocked or their windows down to prevent their windows from being broken, but instead they find random people sleeping in their cars.

On the plus side, the weather there is quite nice.

KevonLooney@lemm.ee on 06 Oct 2023 18:47 next collapse

You definitely should have done it for the resume and networking boost. San Francisco is expensive but you can definitely find deals the more you look for them. Plus the Bay Area is bigger than just San Francisco.

And regarding the other comment, $200K in SF is definitely better than $100K in Sacramento. More money is always better, unless it’s like a 10% bump. First of all, San Francisco is just more beautiful than Sacramento. Food is better. There’s more to do.

Second of all, Sacramento is getting more expensive because people are moving there from the Bay Area. It’s still cheaper, but prices are growing and you don’t live in a major city. People are paying $500K to live next to a cornfield.

gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 Oct 2023 19:41 collapse

Houses in my area (Ione, about an hour south ish of Sac) going for 550k or so when I bought, and again, an hour from the “big city” (sac isn’t much of a big city compared to actual metropolis but still)

KevonLooney@lemm.ee on 06 Oct 2023 19:48 collapse

California real estate is stupid. There is literal farm land right next to expensive ass homes. Building homes is like printing money.

The weather isn’t good enough to justify it, considering recent fires and the fact that you have to live in the Central Valley. Homes in hot-ass methlandia should not be that expensive.

Blamemeta@lemm.ee on 06 Oct 2023 18:50 next collapse

A lot of problems coming together.

Nature is one, they’re warm year round so a lot of homeless folk are better off there.

Earthquakes prevent them from building tall. The surrounding hills make sprawl hard. Both the earth quakes and hills restrict the supply of housing.

And thats before you even start the leftist policies.

GlitterInfection@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:57 next collapse

San Francisco is one of the most beautiful cities in the world. And these tech bro pods, which are not really a thing here unlike in Japan where it’s been a thing for a long time, are a gimmicky joke.

You would get more space and a better place to live in a nicer neighborhood for a similar price if you simply got roommates here. It might be $900 rather than $700 but if you were sharing a bedroom, which would STILL give you more space than these pods, you could easily get down to below $700. These things are preying on tech kids out of college who only know dorm-style life and have been hired into the new AI startups.

brickfrog@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 Oct 2023 19:57 collapse

What kind of hellhole is that city? I had an impression it was extremely expensive but also very wealthy. The more I hear the worse it seems.

LOL start reading about Dubai sometime.

reinar@distress.digital on 06 Oct 2023 20:12 next collapse

Dubai is much cheaper

Nobsi@feddit.de on 06 Oct 2023 21:59 collapse

And much worse.

[deleted] on 06 Oct 2023 20:14 collapse

.

skymtf@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 06 Oct 2023 18:21 next collapse

ugh, this is dysphorian THIS IS NOT FUCKING NORMAL. THIS IS LATE STAGE CAPITALISM

xkforce@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:23 next collapse

Late stage capitalism? They were doing shit like this in the 1800s. It IS capitalism.

skymtf@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 06 Oct 2023 18:31 next collapse

revolution time!

kaitco@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 20:47 next collapse

Like, seriously. It’s always been a thing.

In the 1800s, you could rent a space on a rope overnight so that you could drape yourself over it and have a place to sleep that night that wasn’t on the freezing, urine-soaked ground.

This has long been an issue.

TransplantedSconie@lemm.ee on 06 Oct 2023 21:23 collapse

Holy balls. That was a wild read.

EngineerGaming@feddit.nl on 07 Oct 2023 07:13 collapse

Yea, in my city (where owning your apartment was pretty much impossible until 20th century), people rented out corners inside normal apartments.

Puzzle_Sluts_4Ever@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:53 next collapse

No. This is actually perfectly normal and has been throughout history.

This is a flophouse/hostel/barracks by another name. The concept of these largely predate (modern) capitalism and they are still a very popular model in a lot of high population density cities.

When I was younger, I loved when stuff like this was available because I tend to not spend a lot of time in my hotel when I am on holiday. As I’ve gotten older I have decided it is more important to have a place to stretch out and my own private bathroom but… it was really nice back in the day.

The relative cost and code violations… also just speak to the relative cost of housing. Which is “normal” capitalism.

RaoulDook@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 19:54 collapse

Speaking of the relative cost of housing, you can buy an actual whole house in other parts of the USA for that much a month. That could be a 30-year mortgage payment on a 100k house.

meat_popsicle@sh.itjust.works on 06 Oct 2023 20:18 collapse

In San Francisco/Bay Area that doesn’t even cover a parking space per month.

In the US, the average home price sold was $495k. Where can you find a $100k house that doesn’t need a tear down or complete renovation?

source

RaoulDook@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 20:24 collapse

In the rural parts of the USA they are all over the place. Here is a 5-bedroom house for $95k in Illinois: www.zillow.com/homedetails/…/119741473_zpid/

Nobsi@feddit.de on 06 Oct 2023 21:56 next collapse

My guy that is a 1900 built House. That is an immediate teardown on purchase.

Enigma@sh.itjust.works on 06 Oct 2023 23:11 next collapse

What? Just because a house is old, doesn’t mean it isn’t still habitable. If a house that old is still standing and in good condition chances are it’s built better than new builds. And by the pictures, previous owners have taken a lot of care in it and upgraded it. Sure, the cosmetics may need to change depending on your preferences, but there is nothing wrong with that house structurally.

locuester@lemmy.zip on 06 Oct 2023 23:47 next collapse

Did you look at it? That is not a tear down.

paintbucketholder@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 02:33 collapse

I really like how confidently you are wrong.

averagedrunk@lemmy.ml on 07 Oct 2023 00:27 next collapse

My first house was a 3 bedroom, 2 bath in rural Texas for 5k more than that. That was 14 years ago. I just looked it up and it’s currently $130k. It was built in the 90s, is brick, and still looks pretty good.

Seleni@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 14:19 collapse

So… your solution is to buy a house hundreds of miles away from their job?

RaoulDook@lemmy.world on 09 Oct 2023 14:14 collapse

Nope, I simply answered their question: “In the US, the average home price sold was $495k. Where can you find a $100k house that doesn’t need a tear down or complete renovation?”

deafboy@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 19:21 next collapse

ugh, this is dysphorian THIS IS NOT FUCKING NORMAL. THIS IS LATE STAGE CAPITALISM

scarabic@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 22:10 next collapse

This is a dormitory with a shared living space, bathrooms and shower. If anything the “bunks” are quite generously sized.

Take a look at your comment and ask if maybe you’re flipping out unnecessarily.

Dkarma@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 00:46 next collapse

This kid must be like 17-18 and has seen none of the world. This would be luxury to half the planet.

skymtf@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Oct 2023 05:16 collapse

half the planet lmao, no. Secondly you can point at the US why it’s so bad in those countries too

triclops6@lemmy.ca on 07 Oct 2023 18:41 collapse

Ok obligatory fuck late stage capitalism. That said, hot take, this is a perfectly valid move, 700 for location and a box to sleep in is a welcome option for many renters in the city. If there are shared spaces like kitchen baths etc this works.

If you want your own space, ok, this isn’t for you, but this alleviates a ton of rental demand which could lower rents in aggregate if enough of these are built!

The alternative is your whole paycheck goes to rent and you retire a week before death, i’d be all for this if I were single.

Is someone making a profit? Most definitely, but I get a better option to run my career in the city, I’m down. Not only that, I hope this model picks up so more people can have the option.

My gripe here is the city, bitching about no windows when this is a pretty tangible solution to many renter’s problems. Either fix it yourself or get out the way when others are addressing it.

Lifecoach5000@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:50 next collapse

Lol this reminds me of the scene in The Complete Al from the 80s where Weird Al travels to Japan and stays in one of their hotels:

youtu.be/_Seufp4nvXQ?si=I3QrLETjVvbFA9lL

Edit: skip towards the end if you want to see the specific scene.

PipedLinkBot@feddit.rocks on 06 Oct 2023 18:50 collapse

Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

https://piped.video/_Seufp4nvXQ?si=I3QrLETjVvbFA9lL

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.

Dagamant@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 18:58 next collapse

A pod for sleeping at home: 👍 A pod for sleeping in a hotel: 👍 A pod to rent for cheap on vacation: 👍

A pod is your fucking home: 👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎👎

Wrench@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 20:56 collapse

I imagine this is more like the Japanese coffin hotels. They are for salary men that work too late to take the trains home.

In this case, probably for people who don’t want to do the 1-1.5hr each way to their “just affordable enough” commutter home every day. I doubt these are many people’s long term permanent address.

$700/mo is excessive though.

scarabic@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 22:13 collapse

It’s actually an entire shared living space with a common room, bathrooms, and shower. Not comparable to coffin hotels which are not for extended living. You could absolutely live in these long term. It’s essentially a dormitory. Tech workers fresh out of college probably adapt to them just great. You can’t live anywhere else in SF for $700 and you don’t live in the City to stay home anyway. People living in these spend their time working at lavish offices and going out partying and wining and dining. This is a place to crash, and not even a bad one.

M0oP0o@mander.xyz on 06 Oct 2023 22:52 next collapse

Yay a in city version of a en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bunkhouse Or a western version of en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communal_apartment Or a adult/non criminal (for now) version of en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workhouse

This sort of thing is not new and generally not a flex on the state of things.

scarabic@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 23:58 collapse

The people here are bagging multiple six figures and the reason they are willing to sleep in a crash pad is they spend their waking hours in a luxury office or out at bars and restaurants. That’s just city life. Not the damn debtor’s workhouse. I’m amazed at the hysterics people are showing over this. Save your outrage for something that matters.

M0oP0o@mander.xyz on 07 Oct 2023 00:04 collapse

Like better city planing and the expectation of reasonable shelter for $700 a month?

scarabic@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 00:11 collapse

The housing situation can absolutely be improved. But seriously: this is an improvement. Do you know how many $700 options there are in San Francisco? Try none. I paid $550 for a room in a flat last time I lived there - in 1998

Cities should utilize high density housing styles. Shared living is one of those. But I understand that people paying $700 a month for a house with a backyard and garage - in Missouri - will naturally look at this price tag and think it’s robbery. On the other hand, these tech workers are making $500k much of the time.

Dkarma@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 00:45 collapse

Yeah I laugh every time someone calls shit like this dystopian. I’m like ok so in one breath ppl like that claim this is hellish and in the next talk about how the only solution to housing shortages are housing density. Wtf do they think this is???

Furthermore this is nothing compared to living in hong Kong.

[deleted] on 07 Oct 2023 00:23 collapse

.

centof@lemm.ee on 06 Oct 2023 19:46 next collapse

The real dystopia here is San Francisco outlawing using your land how you want.

r3df0x@7.62x54r.ru on 29 Nov 2023 03:40 next collapse

No one should be building living pods and then packing them full of people.

r3df0x@7.62x54r.ru on 29 Nov 2023 03:45 collapse

I just read the article and I partially agree with you. It’s bureaucratic bullshit reasons.

agitatedpotato@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 Oct 2023 19:46 next collapse

Gotta love that if you have enough money you can just do the thing you want to do, and if it’s illegal the government will simply ask you nicely to fix it later, maybe even fine you an amount of money that’s at least on order of magnitude lower than the profits you made from it.

Zak@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 20:47 collapse

I agree there’s a problem with corporations and wealthy people treating fines as a mere cost of doing business, but in situations where there was neither malicious intent nor actual harm, it’s problematic to create a legal minefield with harsh penalties. The goal of regulation should be to gain compliance rather than punish trivial noncompliance. Of course one might argue that something that does no harm ought not be forbidden at all.

agitatedpotato@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 Oct 2023 22:28 collapse

For a case as benign as this that makes a lot of sense but the attitude of entitlement to projects that generate capital is wild, and not doing something as simple as getting the building permits before you start building is really emblematic of that.

ChaoticEntropy@feddit.uk on 06 Oct 2023 20:38 next collapse

“A big hit” with people who desperately need accommodation that won’t bankrupt them.

the_post_of_tom_joad@sh.itjust.works on 06 Oct 2023 23:56 collapse

Yeah i love how every negative was couched within a sentence mentioning how popular and great these pieces of shit are

AssPennies@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 08:56 collapse

“And there’s really cool people here!”

Get me a bucket, I’m gonna fucking puke.

Secret300@sh.itjust.works on 06 Oct 2023 21:49 next collapse

$700 a month?!

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 21:57 next collapse

Centered in the square carpet of green plastic turf, a Japanese teenager sat behind a C-shaped console, reading a textbook. The white fiberglass coffins were racked in a framework of industrial scaffolding. Six tiers of coffins, ten coffins on a side. Case nodded in the boy’s direction and limped across the plastic grass to the nearest ladder. The compound was roofed with cheap laminated matting that rattled in a strong wind and leaked when it rained, but the coffins were reasonably difficult to open without a key.

The expansion-grate catwalk vibrated with his weight as he edged his way along the third tier to Number 92. The coffins were three meters long, the oval hatches a meter wide and just under a meter and a half tall.

– William Gibson, Neuromancer

Cyberpunk was supposed to be a dystopian vision.

SlopppyEngineer@discuss.tchncs.de on 06 Oct 2023 22:51 next collapse

Most dystopian books are now used as a manual for some politicians and rich a**holes.

pthaloblue@sh.itjust.works on 06 Oct 2023 23:54 collapse

Ready Player One was a dystopia and Zuck was so enamored it became required reading for building the “Metaverse”.

Billions of dollars can’t buy you the ability to sense irony I guess.

Dkarma@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 00:40 collapse

hands book to new hire “Make this in 2 years…there’s red bull in the fridge. You sleep on that mat.”

Oszilloraptor@feddit.de on 07 Oct 2023 06:15 collapse

You sleep on that mat.

Dunno if better or worse than a pod.

MaxVoltage@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 23:15 collapse

soon the window will go, then the other conforts

scarabic@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 22:08 next collapse

I’m so sick of the coverage on this. There is a shared living space and bathrooms and shower, so it’s essentially a dormitory. Big whoop. Actually we could use more of such shared housing.

But then we wouldn’t be able to combine our hatred of tech workers with our complaints about the economy to turn this into a horror story.

shalafi@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 22:44 collapse

And the people utilizing these spaces are not the ones bitching. How odd…

scarabic@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 23:53 collapse

Yeah and while people are outraged at the squalor of it, they’re tech workers so no one’s actually concerned. It’s just an occasion to air one’s one bitching about the economy.

MNByChoice@midwest.social on 06 Oct 2023 23:21 next collapse

Skipping permits is a way of life in SF. (I had work conversations about buying older gromex so the dates were before you purchased in case am inspector noticed. Inspectors were prohibited from noticing anything they were not specifically there for.)

I wondered at the specific permit they missed.

without a permit changing the building from a bank to a living space and illegally converting a toilet into a shower.

That seems important to do properly.

J12@lemmy.world on 06 Oct 2023 23:52 next collapse

$700 for this is insane. I get why they’re doing it but there’s no reason anyone should pay $700 for a bed.

San Francisco should build their own get that shit up to code, make it about 30 stories, have spots for restaurants, stores, retail at the bottom and make it actually affordable and for everyone. There should be no market for 700 a month 4 foot tall boxes. Greedy fucks.

Shit should be like $50 a month max and yea it’s dystopian AF but if people want to do it I guess whatever. Just don’t rip them off.

HurlingDurling@lemm.ee on 07 Oct 2023 00:02 next collapse

And then with all the rampant corruption it would turn into a overpriced slum. Yes I’m pessimistic, and I hope I can be proven wrong and that your idea would happen.

books@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 00:27 next collapse

I mean you pay 700 dollars a month not to have to live next to people who can only afford 50.

J12@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 00:56 next collapse

Hell, under my plan $700 will at least get you a walk in closet sized living box with a mini fridge.

grabyourmotherskeys@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 03:16 collapse

I could live in a place that big and be happy, I think, as long as the bathrooms were clean and I had easy access to food.

I lived in a YMCA for a while. I had a very small room with a bed, a small dresser, and a kitchen chair. You couldn’t sit on the chair of the door was open. I had no fridge so I would keep things on my window sill outside (it was late Fall) but crows kept stealing the food. Worked well for drinks.

The bathrooms weren’t great but I was a breakfast cook going in at 4:30am so I was living opposite other people.

I heard crazy stuff in there. There was a guy who was really mentally ill and prone to raging out. One night he was storming up and down the hall yelling “this isn’t a hallway, it’s a trap!” over and over. That was scary. Other crazy stuff happened because a bunch of other people were staying in two rooms and were really into coke or something (this was a long time ago) and they’d come home after last call, run out of coke, and start arguing over who was holding out, who had had more than their share, did anyone have money, etc. Sometimes they would fight.

I was only there for about six weeks before I found a better place but it kept me from being homeless after I had to move out of a place with one day notice (hotel employee residence, my roommate had an opposite shift to me and had been violating rules left and right and getting written up so the evicted us both with very little warning). Anyway, I was lucky to get in there, I couldn’t afford an apartment. I eventually was able to explain to the hotel security that I had no idea what was going on and signed a paper saying I was out on the first infraction and got back into residence.

Good times.

ZombieTheZombieCat@lemm.ee on 07 Oct 2023 04:15 collapse

What a gross comment

books@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 2023 00:03 collapse

Sorry that came across as rude, but I assume that is definitely some people’s mindset.

I wasn’t advocating for it.

Pyr_Pressure@lemmy.ca on 07 Oct 2023 00:40 next collapse

Just what is shown in the photo would get you $7000 a month… why rent out 2-3 houses when you can rent out 10 boxes I guess.

J12@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 00:54 next collapse

Yep, there’s a market for it so of course the landlords will do it. Housing and rent prices in this country just sickens me but this is some next level shit

Lyrl@lemm.ee on 07 Oct 2023 16:37 collapse

With a housing shortage, say 10 people needing a place to live in this space, renting 2-3 houses leaves 7-8 people homeless. Making progress can’t be just a rejection of sub(sub)standard solutions, it has to also be building acceptable but dense housing.

DudeDudenson@lemmings.world on 07 Oct 2023 03:46 next collapse

Look up how much parking costs in SF lol

themurphy@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 08:08 next collapse

but if people want to do it I guess whatever.

They don’t want it. They need to do it. There’s no choice here. Alternative is to not have a job in your field, because you have to move 300km away to afford something.

triclops6@lemmy.ca on 07 Oct 2023 18:39 collapse

Ok hot take, this is a perfectly valid move, 700 for location and a box to sleep in is a welcome option for many renters in the city. If there are shared spaces like kitchen baths etc this works.

If you want your own space, ok, this isn’t for you, but this alleviates a ton of rental demand which could lower rents in aggregate if enough of these are built!

The alternative is your whole paycheck goes to rent and you retire a week before death, i’d be all for this if I were single.

Is someone making a profit? Most definitely, but I get a better option to run my career in the city, I’m down. Not only that, I hope this model picks up so more people can have the option.

My gripe here is the city, bitching about no windows when this is a pretty tangible solution to many renter’s problems. Either fix it yourself or get out the way when others are addressing it.

Edit: lots of group think and virtue signalling here. If these aren’t there you don’t even have the choice, it’s 5k rent or move away from the city. That’s not bootlicking that’s fact. Whining about landlords being greedy isn’t a solution, and this is.

wildginger@lemmy.myserv.one on 08 Oct 2023 01:55 collapse

You sound like the guy who founded a company to kill himself next to the wreckage of a really old ship.

“That damned city, bitching about safety regulations! They need to just get out of the way of innovation!”

gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works on 07 Oct 2023 00:04 next collapse

“Became a big hit with tech workers” lmao that’s fucking stupid. There’s just nowhere to live that’s remotely reasonably priced in SF. This is like one of the only choices if you really don’t want a roommate.

gnuplusmatt@startrek.website on 07 Oct 2023 00:26 collapse

The header photo suggests at least 4 room mates tho?

hyperhopper@lemmy.ml on 07 Oct 2023 01:23 next collapse

9 roommates*

gnuplusmatt@startrek.website on 07 Oct 2023 02:02 next collapse

Oh yeah, Shit the photo was cropped how I viewed, I was optimistic that the under bed area was a work area or desk or something

AssPennies@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 08:52 collapse

It must smell so horrible in there, with all those brands (farts) mixing together.

gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works on 07 Oct 2023 13:26 collapse

Sorry - I mean like a roommate in a college dorm, wherein you share a room. Because there’s approximately zero chance that one could find a private room to rent in SF for $700 or less.

uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Oct 2023 02:03 next collapse

Who had William Gibson’s coffins on their Cyberpunk Bingo?

Spoiler: They appeared in Japan in the late 80s in hotels, rented a day at a time.

IronpigsWizard@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 08:17 collapse

Is this from Neuromancer per chance? I own the book and never read it.

I do not want to acknowledge how long I have owned it though, lol. It is crazy how things can end up backlogged.

uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Oct 2023 09:51 collapse

Yes. In the beginning of the book, down-on-his-luck Case is sleeping in a rental coffin since it’s all he can afford for accommodations.

IronpigsWizard@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 09:57 collapse

That’s super interesting (given the post context).

I’m going to have to knock this out already then, I’m off work for a week. If I can finish The Hobbit in a day, I can do the same here!

Thank you for the response, I’ll try and report back if I actually keep up my current motivation.

popemichael@lemmy.sdf.org on 07 Oct 2023 03:03 next collapse

So long as they get an actual factual address, then it’s a good deal.

Chunk@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 04:57 collapse

Yeah a good deal for shell corporations.

raynethackery@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 03:48 next collapse

Crush this trend, now.

Mandy@sh.itjust.works on 07 Oct 2023 04:28 next collapse

Those would be fucking coffin homes in China What

IronpigsWizard@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 07:36 next collapse

I remember reading about, “pod hotels” in Akiharbara, “Electric Town”, Japan in the late 90s or early 2000s. I recall them being marketed as a cheap way to see the neighborhood. Even back then, Akiharbara was the global epicenter of anime/manga, retro gaming, arcades, computer stores and repair shops.

Glad to see the concept has now evolved to, “dystopian hell” some 20 years later.

dannym@lemmy.escapebigtech.info on 07 Oct 2023 07:55 collapse

yeah, to be clear: capsule hotels in japan are not meant to be long term stays, they’re for busy business people that need a quick place to sleep for ONE night because they worked till late at night and missed the last train, or similar situations like that. Nobody actually lives in a capsule hotel

EDIT: to clarify, some people may live in a capsule hotel, but they’re not designed for long-term living

IronpigsWizard@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 08:11 next collapse

It’s really sad that someone had the thought process of, “I bet we can convince people to live in these fucking things”. An despite this small bump in the road, it is seemingly working.

It’s disgusting how many people will leverage housing costs (especially in San Francisco) against their fellow (hu)man.

AssPennies@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 08:44 collapse

And living this way isn’t new there, either, it’s an “evolution”.

I can recall a story over a decade ago about google employees renting uhaul trucks to live in, parked on the google campus parking lots. The same article also followed some engineers who were illegally living in rent-a-storage spaces.

So compared to that, it makes these pods look like luxury living, even though they’re all pretty depraved.

Being a software dev myself, I’ll gladly take a lower salary in a low cost-of-living city if it means I can own a house (and not be mortgage poor, either).

IronpigsWizard@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 08:51 next collapse

All valid points. Thanks for mentioning, “mortgage poor”. It’s amazing how many people think that’s the solution to rent…when you’re typically agreeing to pay, essentially rent, for 30 years.

An everyone who gets a mortgage, with rare exception, OF COURSE, believes it will be paid off well before they are anywhere near 30 years. Seemingly forgetting that health issues, social issues, weather events, etc are likely going to stop that from happening.

This post just keeps getting more bleak, lol…

sanguine_artichoke@midwest.social on 07 Oct 2023 09:18 next collapse

The advantage is it’s usually cheaper than rent, and you don’t have a landLORD to come and harass you or deny maintenance requests. Of course, people managed to fuck it up with HOAs though.

IronpigsWizard@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 09:23 collapse

Yeah, I love looking at homes or lots of land for sale (rarely, for is depressing, ha), find something appealing (though generally still unaffordable), proceed to search for the address and wham-o! - HOA with monthly to annual fee. Plus bonus stipulations of what you can/cannot do to both the interior/exterior.

brygphilomena@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 14:03 collapse

30 years of payments. Mostly consistent, during that time, the money is going towards paying off the loan of an asset and building equity. In the long term, I’ll have something to show for the money I spent. 30 years of rent, on the other hand, and I’ll still be renting.

If I decide to move, or something comes up, I have an asset I can leverage. Or I can sell the house, pay off the mortgage and have cash to use for rentals or a new house.

It comes with a lot more responsibility though. It’s on me to maintain the house, upgrade, fix, landscape, etc. That’s where a ton of money goes to keep the value of the house. I also have more liability. If something happens, that’s my house that could burn down or flood. Then I’d be screwed. Or if I were to get sued, that’s an asset that would be used to settle that.

There is no mistaking that 30 years is likely the minimum time to make payments. Those super lucky might put extra money into it early. But there is also a good chance people take a second mortgage or refinance and extend the mortgage with lower payments at some point.

But even with that, it’s still a more sound investment for those that want a house than renting a house.

afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 18:55 collapse

I did my internship in San Jose. Even back then it made sense. The cost was insane and from what I am reading has more than doubled since that point. I knew three interns staying in a single cheap motel together.

They need to finally start building.

devils_advocate@lemmy.ml on 07 Oct 2023 08:25 next collapse

I’ve stayed in one in Osaka. You don’t have access to clothes or belongings during your stay. It’s a lot like staying on a space ship without the travel.

KillAllPoorPeople@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 08:28 next collapse

There have to be people living in capsule hotels in Japan. There are people in Japan living in computer cafes, where the lights are on 24/7. Japan isn’t all sunshine and roses. Tons of people barely hanging on and these cheap ass places let them have at least some sort of dignity. If you work any job in Japan, odds are you’ll have a roof over your head. Same can’t be said in the US, where many homeless people have jobs and can’t afford to be protected from the elements.

[deleted] on 07 Oct 2023 08:43 collapse

.

KillAllPoorPeople@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 08:49 collapse

Nobody actually lives in a capsule hotel

I mean.

PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee on 08 Oct 2023 05:36 collapse

Well, neither are these, but people are using them that way.

But housing in japan isnt that expensive compared to the US.

dannym@lemmy.escapebigtech.info on 08 Oct 2023 11:38 collapse

yeah seriously, I looked at rent prices in chicago and what you can get for 1000 dollars in tokyo in a decent area not too far away from the city you can pay 3000 for in chicago, in most places and if you go to kawasaki or something make it 500.

Be warned tho, one thing that sucks about renting in japan is the initial costs, you’re basically expected to pay 6-9 months rent in advance (“key money” + “agency fee” + “guarantor fee” + deposit) when you rent and if you move you only get the deposit back (usually 1 to 2 months) which is bullshit.

OhmsLawn@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 13:49 next collapse

Don’t get me wrong, I would LOVE to see modern SRO-style buildings, noise proofed, with small individual bathrooms and kitchenettes. That sort of development would be a godsend to the housing shortage, perfect for young people, supercommuters, and recent transplants, as well as for stopgap homeless prevention.

This isn’t that. This is horrible.

Smoogs@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 15:56 next collapse

Yeah young people(students) fresh out on their own and have nothing yet trying to make ends meet don’t have standards yet when they first get out into the world and once they run into responsibilities they find out fast this type of living really isn’t living. It’s actually super limited. Until then: extorters are going to extort.

TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id on 08 Oct 2023 05:14 collapse

But how is this supposed to happen in high-density cities like NYC or SF?

I don’t have any answers, but as someone who lived in SF for 7 years back in the 90s and early oughts as a student, I know for a fact that “there are no simple solutions for the problems that we face.”

Yeah, I just quoted a DRI song; guilty as charged!

OhmsLawn@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 2023 14:41 collapse

I know. It’s difficult. It would require changes to coding for square footage requirements. It might not be particularly profitable. It’d be expensive to run safely. The opportunity costs would be astronomical (considering the luxury-condo alternative).

It wouldn’t be the solution, because no one thing is. However, It would be a solution to a narrow set of problems, and an asset to residents and workers if it were managed and secured properly. I think one key would be ensuring that it didn’t become a shelter for the vagrant homeless population, nor a place for families, just a relatively inexpensive, clean, safe option for individuals to land for a while.

brlemworld@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 13:54 next collapse

You get more space and amenities in prison. And much cheaper.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 07 Oct 2023 15:44 next collapse

This is the dumbest thing I’ve seen in a while

Madison420@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 18:13 next collapse

The excuse by the residents as to why this is ok is certainly that.

How dumb do you have to be to complain about how much living in the city costs while paying almost a thousand a month to live in a closet… You. You’re the reason it’s expensive and why housing isn’t a priority. You have to stop buying this dumb shit to solve the issue and let’s be honest if you’re paying 700 to live in a closet and praise it’s networking chances you aren’t unable to move.

Trollception@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 20:28 collapse

You do realize a 500 sq ft studio apartment may run $2000/mo or more in that same area right? It’s one of the most expensive places to live in the US

andxz@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 20:38 collapse

That’s the problem, and this is not a reasonable solution.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 07 Oct 2023 23:50 next collapse

I think the solution is to move somewhere cheaper with fast Internet.

TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id on 08 Oct 2023 05:07 collapse

I don’t argue that there aren’t any better solutions, but SF is on a peninsula (called Yerba Buena if anyone cares) and is already the 2nd most densely populated city in the US, which is just to say that it’s a limited space without a lot of options for housing short of building in more density.

Sunroc@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 19:42 collapse

As a person who worked at one of these cool tech companies that provided food for breakfast lunch and dinner and snacks 24/7, I found I was only using my apartment to sleep. Most of the offices of other amenities such as a gym, and all the tech workers would go out for happy hours. If I was single this would be a very valid option. Some people don’t plan to spend time in their apartments.

OrangeJoe@lemm.ee on 07 Oct 2023 20:04 next collapse

I never understood that whole tech/startup culture. I would absolutely hate for my entire life to be my job. And from the outside all these “cool” perks are very clearly designed to get you to spend as much time working as possible. No thanks.

Sunroc@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 20:09 next collapse

I worked normally hour, I just didn’t need a full apartment. You going to start your work day there’s breakfast you work there’s lunch you work until 5:00 and then you go to the gym and then you go back for dinner when you do something cool in the city. I actually have really fond memories of that period.

OrangeJoe@lemm.ee on 07 Oct 2023 20:13 collapse

I’m glad it worked out for you. And I also know that my idea of it all can’t possibly apply to every single company that was or is a part of that whole culture.

I just find myself sceptical of it all since I much prefer to have my own time, and my own space as separate from work and the people I work with. And perks like that just very clearly seem designed to get me to spend as much time at work as possible.

Takumidesh@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 2023 05:03 collapse

I really think that it started as real perks to attract a lot of talent, and slowly got morphed and abused into a way to siphon minutes out of employees lives.

hansl@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 2023 05:33 collapse

It kind of started when Google, Apple and others started colluding to keep wages low by refusing to hire each other’s talent. They’ve been found guilty of that and I got a nice check of about 10$ plus a pinky promise they wouldn’t do it again. Yeah!

vidarh@lemmy.stad.social on 08 Oct 2023 12:12 collapse

It started before that. In '98 I remember having dinner with someone who worked at Netscape before then who told me about how a co-worker had just been fired for living in the office, something they’d apparently decided to do in the first place because they already then had all of these perks designed to keep them in the office.

The Google, Apple etc. collusion certainly was a huge step up in abusive practices, though.

Renacles@discuss.tchncs.de on 08 Oct 2023 16:45 collapse

For what it’s worth, I’m an engineer and my experience is the complete opposite, it’s a super chill job and I have all the free time I could possibly want.

I guess it depends on what job you look for.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 07 Oct 2023 23:42 next collapse

What happens if you lose your job?

wildginger@lemmy.myserv.one on 08 Oct 2023 01:41 collapse

Sign up for the next up and coming tech start up company

vidarh@lemmy.stad.social on 08 Oct 2023 12:08 next collapse

Having worked at, and co-founded, multiple startups over a period of 28 years: Sure. But why are you choosing that?

The reality is that the moment I started standing up to employers or investors and expecting decent standards, they folded and I was able to have a good work-life balance and get paid market rates and still get to work on cool startups and get shares.

These companies prey on most people never thinking to negotiate (and having been on the other side of the table, and tried to be decent: most people never negotiate, even though we almost always have space to do so)

onlinepersona@programming.dev on 08 Oct 2023 13:35 collapse

Are 700$ really not that much? Sounds like a lot for a bed

grayman@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 2023 17:31 collapse

These people are making $80k at the very bottom, $120-200k is typical. Keep in mind they are paying 40% in income taxes alone (federal, state, social security, Medicare). When rent is $3-4k for a room you just sleep in, $700 for a smaller room is a nice savings.

onlinepersona@programming.dev on 08 Oct 2023 20:54 collapse

80k minimum? I feel so Europoor.

Actually… 5 weeks of holiday, mostly free healthcare, good public transport, a mostly functioning democracy 🤔 Maybe not that poor. Still can’t afford a house 😭

grayman@lemmy.world on 09 Oct 2023 02:45 collapse

This is a California city. The rest of the US is not so nuts. And it’s funny you mention socialist benefits. CA is the most socialist state and it’s a giant shit hole for most people.

triclops6@lemmy.ca on 07 Oct 2023 18:39 next collapse

Ok hot take, this is a perfectly valid move, 700 for location and a box to sleep in is a welcome option for many renters in the city. If there are shared spaces like kitchen baths etc this works.

If you want your own space, ok, this isn’t for you, but this alleviates a ton of rental demand which could lower rents in aggregate if enough of these are built!

The alternative is your whole paycheck goes to rent and you retire a week before death, i’d be all for this if I were single.

Is someone making a profit? Most definitely, but I get a better option to run my career in the city, I’m down. Not only that, I hope this model picks up so more people can have the option.

My gripe here is the city, bitching about no windows when this is a pretty tangible solution to many renter’s problems. Either fix it yourself or get out the way when others are addressing it.

db0@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Oct 2023 18:53 next collapse

This is what enough bootlicking does to a brain…

funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works on 07 Oct 2023 18:58 next collapse

what about when the person in the next bunk jerks off, farts, falls asleep, snores?

this is a nightmare scenario with no redeeming features that I’m sure will quickly lead depression if not violence

sheogorath@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 19:50 collapse

Meh, if you’ve lived in an all boys dorm in a boarding school that’s really not an issue. The main issue is how the fuck is the property market is so fucked beyond relief that paying 700 dollars for a bunk bed a “welcome” option.

funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works on 07 Oct 2023 22:32 collapse

ah yes, an all boys dormitory, what every young, grown man looks forward to in their adult life

this is some Road to Wigan Pier shit.

naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Oct 2023 20:08 next collapse

Did you just “well actually” slums?

TwoGems@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 20:41 collapse

You used to could find a one bedroom apartment for $900 and under and you think a $700 sleeping pod is a good idea??

Zummy@lemmy.world on 07 Oct 2023 21:20 next collapse

Tech companies that offer places to sleep, eat and play at work, only do so so they can keep you working as long as a possible. If you never leave the office they make boatloads of money and make yourself a free Eggo waffle. And if you try to work from home so you can live in a city you can actually afford, they make come into the office so it’s impossible. Not because you aren’t doing good work at home, but because you can’t won’t 24/7 at home.

zeekaran@sopuli.xyz on 08 Oct 2023 04:34 next collapse

$700/mo is $23/night. Capsule hotels in Tokyo are about $30/night.

onlinepersona@programming.dev on 08 Oct 2023 13:33 collapse

Do people live in those hotels in Tokyo?

vodkasolution@feddit.it on 08 Oct 2023 13:09 next collapse

They write “tech workers” but it’s pronounced “tech slaves”

1984@lemmy.today on 08 Oct 2023 15:15 next collapse

Who are these tech workers who wants to sleep in office pods??

fabio1@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 2023 15:16 next collapse

I have a friend that moved to Japan when he was in his twenties to work in a blue collar job. The pay was good, but he had to work a lot of overtime, sometimes 12, 14 hours. These jobs also often offered a place to live nearby the factory. Somehow it seems very similar to this, the difference is that he got an actual apartment and not this sad excuse for one.

One day he got sick of it all, so he started to just apply for these jobs, get free housing, and never show up to work. He could live rent free for a month, sometimes two in the time between getting fired and finally evicted. When that happened, he would move to a different city and then do it all over again.

In the meantime he was studying Japanese and doing side gigs. After doing that for awhile he landed a job as an English teacher in a school and he doesn’t have to do that anymore.

x4740N@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 2023 15:45 next collapse

A boring dystopia

alienanimals@lemmy.world on 08 Oct 2023 17:08 collapse

People don’t want to live in this pods for the most part. The problem is NIMBYs in San Francisco constantly block new housing from being built. This results in insane housing rental prices for workers. Because housing prices are so insane, it makes $700 sleeping pods look like a steal.

The issue is the lack of housing, NIMBYs, and the local government.