© Alexander Spatari/Getty Images New Yorkers are seeking out pandemic apartments. Alexander Spatari/Getty Images |
- Wealthy New Yorkers are buying or renting second apartments in the city for more space, The New York Post's Zachary Kussin reported.
- The second apartments help them separate life from work in a remote world.
- Other urban dwellers are taking advantage of the sharing economy, renting out apartments or hotels by the hour or day for an escape from home.
But those who stayed behind are renting out or buying second apartments for more space, The New York Post's Zachary Kussin reported. He spoke with several New York City residents who found a work-life balance hard to come by while working remotely. They told him a second apartment acts as an office to create that needed separation — and a getaway after spending too much time with their loved ones.
They're paying anywhere from a $2,100 per month in rent for a 450-square-foot studio in Manhattan to a $195,000 contract for studio co-op in Queens. While some are renting apartments in the same building a few floors down or buying a place in the same neighborhood, Kussin wrote, some are buying the apartment next door with plans to combine it with their current apartment.
Ariel Moses, a 34-year-old communications professional, is doing just that. "I'm working in my bedroom right now and it's not productive," she told Kussin. "I need to maintain some decorum in some sense, and some professionalism."
Citygoers are also utilizing shared services for an escape
But renting or buying a second apartment in the city isn't the only way urban dwellers are taking a breath of air from cramped quarters.
Others are turning to new services for an escape, like the day rates mainstream hotels are now offering to cooped-up individuals. While renting a motel by the hour isn't a new concept, this move has made it more socially acceptable.
Many major hotel brands, from Marriott to Sheraton, have created daily office packages for parents looking for a calm, childless workspace, reported The New York Post's Lisa Fickenscher. Hilton's Cincinnati Netherland Plaza hotel, for example, is offering guests a room from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. for $69.
There's also Globe, an app launched in 2019 that offers short-term apartment and home rentals by the hour. The platform has seen an uptick in demand since the pandemic began in March, CEO Manny Bamfo told USA Today's David Oliver. Users include everyone from essential workers looking for breaks during the workday to non-essential workers looking for a reprieve from those they're stuck at home with, according to Bamfo.
Brittney Gwynn told The New York Times she used Globe to book a vacant apartment in Brooklyn for two hours at a $50 hourly rate to take a break from the boyfriend she'd been quarantining with. "We're getting on each other's nerves," she said.
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Others are turning to new services for an escape, like the day rates mainstream hotels are now offering to cooped-up individuals. While renting a motel by the hour isn't a new concept, this move has made it more socially acceptable.
Many major hotel brands, from Marriott to Sheraton, have created daily office packages for parents looking for a calm, childless workspace, reported The New York Post's Lisa Fickenscher. Hilton's Cincinnati Netherland Plaza hotel, for example, is offering guests a room from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. for $69.
There's also Globe, an app launched in 2019 that offers short-term apartment and home rentals by the hour. The platform has seen an uptick in demand since the pandemic began in March, CEO Manny Bamfo told USA Today's David Oliver. Users include everyone from essential workers looking for breaks during the workday to non-essential workers looking for a reprieve from those they're stuck at home with, according to Bamfo.
Brittney Gwynn told The New York Times she used Globe to book a vacant apartment in Brooklyn for two hours at a $50 hourly rate to take a break from the boyfriend she'd been quarantining with. "We're getting on each other's nerves," she said.
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