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Immigration See other Immigration Articles Title: The Rent is Too Damn High: San Fran Residents Pay $1,000/Mth To Live In Shipping Containers Theres nothing quite like a grotesquely lopsided economic recovery in which a handful of cities boom, while the rest of the nation stagnates. Even worse, millennials living in such chosen cities face one of two options. Either live in mom and dads basement, or face a standard of living far more similar to 19th tenement standards than the late 1990s tech boom. With that out of the way, I want to introduce you to what a $1,000 per month rental in the San Francisco Bay area looks like. Shipping containers: Dont worry, theres a lovely garden out back: We learn more from Bloomberg: Luke Iseman has figured out how to afford the San Francisco Bay area. He lives in a shipping container. The Wharton School graduates 160-square-foot box has a camp stove and a shower made of old boat hulls. Its one of 11 miniature residences inside a warehouse he leases across the Bay Bridge from the city, where his tenants share communal toilets and a sense of adventure. Legal? No, but hes eluded code enforcers who rousted what he calls cargotopia from two other sites. If all goes according to plan, hell get a startup out of his response to the most expensive U.S. housing market. Its not making us much money yet, but it allows us to live in the Bay Area, which is a feat, said Iseman, 31, whos developing a container-house business. We have an opportunity here to create a new model for urban development thats more sustainable, more affordable and more enjoyable. As many as 60,000 San Franciscans live in illegal housing, according to the Department of Building Inspection. Iseman collects $1,000 a month for each of the 11 structures parked in the 17,000-square-foot warehouse he rents for $9,100. Tenants include a Facebook Inc. engineer, a SolarCity Corp. programmer and a bicycle messenger. Its not even San Francisco proper either, this is in Oakland. You could probably catch $2k per month for a cargo box in the Mission. Iseman used to pay $4,200 a month in San Franciscos Mission District for a two-bedroom apartment with a slanted floor and mosquito-breeding puddles. He bought his metal box for $2,300, delivery included, then cut out windows with a plasma torch and installed a loft bed, shower and bamboo flooring. He estimates his all-in cost at $12,000, and plans to sell refashioned containers for about $20,000 through his company, Boxouse. What were doing is converting industrial waste into a house in a couple of weeks, said Iseman, who also founded a pedicab fleet. Meanwhile, he doesnt plan on seeking city approval for cargotopia, whose location he asked not be identified. Id rather ask forgiveness than ask permission. I want to be clear that Im not knocking Mr. Iseman for starting this project. He seems to be a well-meaning, entrepreneurial guy trying to make the best out of a bad situation and solve a very real problem on his own. What I am knocking is the criminally corrupt American oligarchy, which left this legacy to our youth due to their unfathomable greed, cronyism and nearsightedness. Of course, Ive covered this trend several times over the past several years
NYC Residents Will Pay $2-3k a Month for Micro-Apartments as Luxury Car Sales Outpace Regular Car Sales Coming to San Francisco
Tenement Sized Apartments! Back to 19th Century Living in NYC: Bloomberg Proposes Tenement Sized Apartments for $2K a Month Poster Comment: 160 square feet is in Oakland for $1,000 a month. $4,200 a month is in SF but that is a Mexican gang territory. Would any of these rents be charged if we did not have 55 million immigrants since NAFTA? Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Horse (#0)
=================================================== If you were able to follow the average Mexican back to their house, who OWNS their own Mexican food restaurant (employing Mexican illegal aliens on the CHEEP), you would find they usually live in a very nice house in a very nice neighborhood. U.S. Constitution - Article IV, Section 4: NO BORDERS + NO LAWS = NO COUNTRY
Generations ago folks with barely a grade school education built comfortable lodgings without any mortgage; impossible today because of regulations concocted by self-serving bureaucrats so they can freeload their way in their sinecures.
What's the morality of it? Exploitation or mutual benefit? $1k sounds awfully high even for the left coast.
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