By Kenneth Gordon
Here are 5 easy upgrades for your rentals this summer as the weather is getting nicer, the sun is shining brighter, and the days are longer, so time for upgrades to attract tenants during the moving season.
For many rental property owners, this means it’s time to get started on summer projects, which can range from very small updates to the interior to major renovation projects, such as remodeling a bathroom or replacing siding all to help attract tenants.
You can still make a huge impact by making minor changes that are simple and don’t cost a ton of money
One of the most popular trends—especially in preparation for the summer—is replacing old, out-of-date, or damaged windows with new ones. Most people don’t realize this, but we lose 25 to 30 percent of the heated and cooled air our HVAC systems produce through our windows and doors.
In other words, that’s 30 percent of the energy we pay for that ends up completely wasted. You can prevent this from happening by installing windows that provide better insulation, helping keep cool air in during the warm summer months, preventing heat loss during the winter, and reducing the frequency at which your A/C unit runs. The less you have to depend on your HVAC system, the less you’ll have to pay in energy costs.
When shopping for new windows, look for high-quality, durable materials that are insulating and will help reduce heat transfer, such as vinyl and fiberglass. When selecting glass for your new windows, choose dual-pane Low-E (low-emissivity) glass with gas fills between the panes. The more glass panes, the better—two or more will provide greater energy efficiency, improved impact-resistance and sound insulation. Low-E coatings on the glass reflect infrared light, which keeps heat out and helps protect your home’s interior furnishings from damage from UV light.
This is one of the 5 easy upgrades for your rentals that will really make a difference. With summer comes lots of sunshine and rising temperatures that can make your home feel uncomfortable – while increasing your energy costs. Not only that, but sunlight streaming through your windows can be annoying. And with more evening hours for neighbors and curious eyes to peer in, tenants will want to find a way to cover windows.
Whether you need to add window treatments to your home or replace your existing window coverings, installing new blinds or shades is a great way to help keep your home cool during the summer, improve your privacy, and update your home’s style.
When it comes to shopping for new blinds or shades, there are a variety of styles available on the market. Gone are the days when homeowners had only a few options to choose from. These days, homeowners can select from a range of styles, such as room-darkening shades, wood or faux wood blinds, and Roman shades, as well as bamboo blinds and woven shades for those who are looking for more unique and environmentally friendly coverings.
There are also a range of colors and control mechanisms to choose from, including cordless operation, which is recommended for apartments and rental homes with small children and pets.
Ceiling fans have a reputation for being noisy, outdated, and terrible for design—and perhaps this may have been true at one point in time. However, much like window treatments, ceiling fans now come in more modern options that are quiet, sleek, and elegant. There are many benefits to incorporating ceiling fans into your rental unit that go beyond simply moving air and keeping rooms cool.
For example, ceiling fans can help dramatically lower energy costs by up to 40 percent by making rooms feel cooler, allowing you to raise the thermostat and be just as comfortable. Ceiling fans are also extremely versatile and come in a variety of styles, sizes, and finishes to complement your home’s style. Many come with lights for greater illumination.
To get the biggest energy savings out of your ceiling fans, make sure you have them set to rotate in the correct direction. In the summertime, ceiling fans should rotate counter-clockwise, allowing the blades to push cooler air down; in the winter, reverse the direction so that the blades rotate clockwise, pulling cool air up toward the ceiling.
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Another simple upgrade you can make is to provide tenants with slipcovers for their furniture or your furniture in a furnished unit, to protect them from becoming damaged in the sun. You can prevent sunlight from shining in by keeping your blinds or shades closed, but for added protection—and for beautiful days when tenants want to keep the windows open—consider adding slipcovers to furnishings.
One easy upgrade that makes a huge impact is swapping out your bedding. Our needs for our homes can change greatly depending on the time of year it is. In the winter, we need thick blankets with cozy layers and plushness to combat the cold; in the summer, we need bedding that’s airier and light.
Choose breathable fabrics, such as cottons and linens that won’t suffocate you in the heat and humidity, and store your down comforter until the temperatures start to cool down again. Another simple and quick update you can make to your space is to place a few new pillows around the house to give your rooms a crisp, summery feel.
After hibernating in your home during the cold winter months, the summertime allows us the opportunity to open our windows and invite sunshine and warm weather in. Whether you have the budget to take on larger updates or you simply want to make a few small changes, these five simple updates will improve your home and invite you to enjoy it this summer in style.
These 5 easy upgrades for your rental homes will impress your tenants and keep them happy.
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Tenant screening is a crucial element of any rental property business. A detailed look into an applicant’s criminal, financial, and eviction history gives landlords insight into a potential tenant’s history before committing to a business relationship.
But there is another type of screening that goes beyond the routine: drug testing. With housing resources scarce and the consequences of an unfit tenant potentially disastrous, you may wonder if you can drug test tenants who apply to live in your rental property.
The answer is yes. You can drug test applicants as long as you test every prospective tenant who applies to your dwelling. Once tenants move in, however, you can’t randomly screen residents unless your process is specified in the lease and agreed to by the tenant. However, different housing arrangements, such as sober living facilities, may require drug testing as a condition of housing.
Of course, as with most things related to the legal system, there are a number of considerations you’ll need to be aware of before including drug testing in your screening processes.
Did you know that instead of collecting a large application fee and having to issue a receipt showing what that fee was used for, you can just send a link to your tenant to pay for their own screening fees? At TurboTenant you can do this and so much more using the amenities of a FREE account!
As it relates to Fair Housing Act (FHA) protections, formerly addicted drug users are considered a protected class. You cannot simply deny an applicant due to past drug addiction as long as they’re deemed rehabilitated and can prove it via documentation.
It is important to state, however, that those FHA protections don’t apply to those in active addiction to illegal substances. In other words, if an applicant continues to use illicit drugs, they’re not considered a protected class.
The issue with drug testing prospective tenants arises when landlords seek to only drug test individual applicants on suspicion of drug use or revelations of past drug addiction. Suppose a renter suspects a landlord is singling them out and forcing them to drug test as a condition of renting a property while other prospective tenants aren’t facing the same scrutiny. Now, suppose they’re correct in their assumption.
In that case, the tenant could sue the landlord for violating fair housing laws. The bottom line: If you’re going to drug test your applicants, you must test every single one.
Of course, unlike illicit drugs, alcohol is not an illegal substance. As a result, different rules apply. Those experiencing alcohol abuse disorder can be considered disabled and are, therefore, a protected class. You cannot deny this protected class housing based on the fact that they have an alcohol addiction.
While these rules aren’t strictly related to drug testing, you should understand the difference between how the FHA regulates alcohol and illegal drug addiction.
Protected classes aren’t free to pose threats to property or other tenants and still be considered protected under the FHA.
No matter the disability, whether drug, alcohol, or another disability, nothing in the FHA requires housing providers to make a dwelling “available to an individual whose tenancy would constitute a direct threat to the health or safety of other individuals or whose tenancy would result in substantial physical damage to the property of others,” as noted by the Cornell Law School.
In other words, if you were to rent to an individual with an alcohol use disorder or another addiction (treated or not) who poses a threat to your property or others in the community, their tenancy would not be guaranteed based on the fact that they have an addiction. They still need to contribute to a safe living environment.
For a deeper dive into the rules and regulations, the National Housing Law Project breaks down the actions a landlord can take, and the evidence-based requirements landlords must meet to take further action.
As mentioned briefly above, not all housing situations are the same. In these cases, drug testing may not constitute a breach of the FHA.
Housing specifically designated for sober living or recovering people with an addiction might feature drug testing policies as a part of their residency requirements.
Drug testing might be permissible under specific company policies when housing is directly tied to employment, like living on company property.
Some leases might outline drug testing with the tenant’s explicit consent. Even in these cases, however, landlords should tread carefully to avoid claims of coercion.
If you’re a Section 8 housing provider, you must account for the federal rules set to enforce safe housing conditions and how individual public housing authorities apply those rules.
The 2013 Journal of Public Policy Development and Research article “Alcohol, Drug, and Criminal History Restrictions in Public Housing” reports that some housing authorities require drug testing to receive PHA funds.
“The Indianapolis Housing Agency (2010) imposed mandatory drug testing of applicant households, whereas the Charlotte Housing Authority (2012) required applicants to sign consent forms allowing the PHA to contact third parties involved in an applicant’s life (for example, social workers, police officers, and landlords).”
The critical takeaway is to contact your public housing authority for information regarding drug testing if you use these programs. Housing authorities can enforce federal regulations via the rules they deem appropriate, and there are significant differences between PHAs.
Landlords who disregard Fair Housing Act protections and implement selective drug testing risk facing significant legal consequences.
Tenants denied housing due to a drug test can file lawsuits against the landlord for violating the FHA, provided they have the evidence to back up their wrongful denial. For example, if a potential tenant takes opioid pain medication for a disability yet is denied housing based on the results of a drug test, they can sue.
In addition to applicant lawsuits, fair housing advocacy groups or the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) may sue the landlord.
If the court finds the landlord in violation, they may be required to compensate the tenant for emotional distress, moving costs, and additional expenses.
The court could order the landlord to cease the discriminatory practice and offer the wrongfully denied tenant housing.
The HUD can impose civil penalties on landlords who violate the FHA.
If you choose to drug test every tenant who applies to your rental, you’ll have an additional layer of cost and administrative work to manage. Drug tests aren’t free, and tenants aren’t likely to foot the bill.
Plus, tenants who must complete a drug screening to rent your place may choose to bring their money elsewhere. In competitive markets, a drug testing requirement may extend vacancy times and compel renters to look for properties that don’t have drug screening requirements.
Of course, every situation is different. If you’re subject to specific PHA rules, you may have no choice but to drug test prospective tenants.
However, if you’re not bound to PHA regulations, we think there are valuable alternatives you can utilize to ensure your tenant treats your property with care, maintains a safe environment for other tenants, and ensures the rent gets paid monthly.
While subject to legal limitations, background checks reveal information about criminal history or prior evictions. If an applicant has a criminal history related to drug use, manufacture, or distribution, you can choose another tenant.
But be careful; different states legislate the offenses you can deny. For example, in some states, if the tenant has a deferred sentence that wasn’t revoked, you can’t deny housing based on the charge.
Credit checks provide insight into a would-be tenant’s financial responsibility and ability to pay rent. While a credit score won’t give you the best idea of whether or not a tenant will pay their rent on time, a history of on-time payments can provide peace of mind.
Contacting previous landlords or employers for reference checks (with tenant permission) can offer valuable insight into a tenant’s rental history and behavior.
While background checks and credit checks can create a sketch of a potential tenant, conversations with those around the applicant will fill the sketch with color.
Verifying employment (with tenant approval) enables landlords to confirm an applicant has the means to pay rent on time. It’s a good way to verify that what the applicant says is accurate and that they’re employed.
Now included with TurboTenant Premium, Income Insights provides landlords with an additional check; landlords can now use information from TransUnion to compare against renter-reported income.
You don’t have to drug test applicants to ask questions related to drug use. While we don’t expect people with something to hide to answer these questions truthfully, there are some questions that landlords can ask prospective tenants.
Just be sure to ask every applicant so as not to discriminate.
Here is a list of acceptable drug-testing-related questions from Cornell Law:
(4) Inquiring whether an applicant for a dwelling is a current illegal abuser or addict of a controlled substance;
(5) Inquiring whether an applicant has been convicted of the illegal manufacture or distribution of a controlled substance.
Simply asking these questions can help you let potential renters know that you’re serious about these factors, which may be enough for them to consider other properties to rent. If they bristle at the questions, you’ll have something to consider.
Depending on your circumstances and reasoning for drug testing tenants, the process could end up being more trouble than it’s worth. Between paying for drug tests, navigating FHA laws, and risking legal action, consider a thorough screening process from a trusted partner instead.
TurboTenant’s tenant screening service delivers industry-leading screening reports that cover:
When you pair a comprehensive report with thorough reference checks, you’ll give yourself the best opportunity to land quality tenants who’ll fulfill their end of the bargain.
And if you’re a landlord looking to simplify your property management process, TurboTenant is more than a great tenant screening service. When you sign up for a free account, you gain access to rent collection, maintenance management, property advertising, and other features to help you save time and money.
By Ryan Squires
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From professionally managed units to resident-hosting collaborations, owners, operators, and renters are finding the perks of renting out units for the short term.
Although March 2020 placed a screeching halt on travel and the short-term rental (STR) industry, what has blossomed post-pandemic for multifamily owners and operators is the opportunity to gain a healthy extra revenue stream and offload a little cash flow risk.
Remote and hybrid work continues to flourish, making the option of renting for the short term doable for many Americans. Yet, how this ability and its growing group of “subscribers” are harnessed through STR providers and hosts can make all the difference.
“With apartment vacancies on the rise, multifamily operators and owners need to be creative and innovative when looking for opportunities to maximize asset value,” says Jason Fudin, CEO and co-founder of Placemakr, which offers nightly, short-term, and long-term stays in apartment settings either owned or powered by the company.
“The good news is that there is a very clear way to bring cash flow back to—or better yet above—previous levels. The most effective way to do this is to tap into other customers where there is plenty of demand. Our recommendation? Furnishing vacant units to support short-term rental customers,” Fudin adds.
Flex rental operator Kasa continues to see a growing demand for various lengths of stays in apartment settings as travelers prioritize flexibility with a little more space. Roman Pedan, founder and CEO of Kasa, says millennial and Gen Zers are especially choosing experiences over things, which fuels the need for furnished rentals for the “self-directed, digital native, modern traveler.”
Pedan shares, “Properties that lack furnished rentals are invisible to this large and growing segment of housing/living demand. Over time, we believe that catering solely to long-term unfurnished and long-term furnished demand and ignoring flexible any-length-of stay rentals will be as unheard of to a property as not allowing pets [and, indeed, until consumer demand proved too strong, not too long ago, pets were banned from most properties]. Long-term properties need to serve the needs of their consumers, and that means providing a form of housing that is more dynamic than the 12-month unfurnished lease.”
At Kasa, the most common guests are business travelers, families traveling with children or with other families, and people living on the road for extended periods of time. Whether through Kasa-powered properties or partnerships with multifamily owners or operators, like AMLI Residential and Greystar, Kasa has found that the average length of stay is roughly six nights, and over 30% of nights are from people staying 30-plus days. Pedan says the average age of a Kasa guest is older than some might guess at 40, with an average income over $100,000, matching the income of residents in Kasa-powered properties.
This pool of short-term renters is an ideal target for multifamily owners and operators who are looking to fill vacancies as record new supply comes online this year. Whether through units set aside and managed by a STR provider or by the operator itself, a once-vacant apartment can become an additional revenue source with minimal investment.
“With lower-than-average deal volume and stagnant rents in many markets, operators increasingly seek opportunities to grow ancillary revenue while vigorously defending occupancy. Enter short-term rental as an amenity, representing operators’ competitive advantage,” says Jesse Stein, Airbnb’s head of real estate. The company collaborates with operators and renters alike through its Airbnb-friendly apartment program.
The program gives prospective renters the ability to stay at more than 400 Airbnb-friendly apartment buildings with more than 125,000 units on the platform across over 40 markets, including 127 cities and 17 states. Stein says, “When primary residents can host their apartments, rent becomes more affordable. Since its launch in November 2022, the median income generated per resident in the Airbnb-friendly apartment program has been $3,500, with the typical host hosting for 30 nights.”
Sentral president Lisa Yeh shares, “Multifamily owners are slowly coming around to the fact that, when done right, STRs can be a valuable piece of their overall strategy. At the same time, we’re seeing the STR industry begin to embrace partnerships with multifamily properties.” STRs are approximately 15% of Sentral’s 10,000 units under management, but Yeh says of those properties that do offer STRs, they consistently see net operating income rise an average of 20%.
In addition to boosting revenue for multi-family owners and operators, the ability to offset high rental costs can also be appealing to residents, especially if they are already away traveling for business or pleasure. Yeh says, “In today’s uncertain economy, adding another revenue stream is almost all upside—provided, of course, you manage the mix correctly. One surprising benefit is that many residents enjoy engaging and connecting with people who are there for a shorter period of time, so it actually bolsters our sense of community.”
She adds, “Most Sentral communities with short-term units are ranked in [J Turner’s] Elite 1% for customer service scores. For example, our Chicago asset with 25% STR units is ranked as one of the best multifamily buildings for customer satisfaction—while driving 15% higher revenues thanks to the STR mix.”
Offering a mix of various lengths of stay can also give potential renters the opportunity to “try out” a community. “Flex rentals can be used as a zero-cost leasing channel for the property. After booking, about 4% of Kasa guests self-report that they are visiting the property because they are ‘considering a move,’” Pedan notes. “Kasa shares both offline and online leasing materials about the property with these guests to increase the odds that they lease at the property. This becomes a very targeted channel for owners to accelerate leasing and let prospective residents ‘try before they buy.’”
Building on residents’ boosted sense of community that Yeh mentions, Pedan adds that STRs within multifamily communities can also create a landing place for family or friends of residents who may not have the space to accommodate visitors themselves.
“Not only do flex rentals not detract from the rest of the community but—when done right—they can create an amenity for the rest of the property’s residents. This is because flex rentals can be used by visiting family and friends as inexpensive accommodations,” Pedan says. “Residents of a Kasa property can host traveling friends or family in the fully furnished and professionally designed Kasa units at their property, offering a more convenient, cost-effective, and comfortable alternative to a pullout couch or a downtown hotel.”
Greystar, who partners with Kasa but also Airbnb for resident hosting, has seen the advantages of allowing its residents to host their spaces through STR programs. Young Hill, managing director, flexible living strategic services, at Greystar, says, “The benefits of hosting include program parameters, oversight for community teams, a revenue share for owners, and responsible hosting in collaboration with Airbnb to deactivate ‘bad actors.’ Additionally, there is a new demand for long-term unfurnished leases from renters seeking affordability by hosting their homes.”
Greystar also has its own network of branded short-term units, ShortStay by Greystar, which ensures the company’s residents convenient access and exclusive perks as they explore the United States. The units range in availability from one night to 30-plus nights, are fully furnished, and professionally serviced in Greystar-managed communities, Hill notes.
Now a little over one year into its collaboration with the Airbnb-friendly marketplace, Hill anticipates that over 300 Greystar properties will become available this year in terms of resident hosting.
Like Greystar, Sentral also offers a mix of STRs and units listed on Airbnb by its residents. Yeh says, “It’s a natural fit for our company, since one of our main differentiators in the multifamily space is our inclusion of high customer service combined with hospitality-inspired amenities like valet parking, concierge services, rooftop pools, high-end fitness centers with group classes, curated resident events on-site and off-site, Tesla shares, and complementary food and beverage offerings.”
Placemakr’s Fudin adds, “Because this mixed-use approach has proven to help owners weatherproof their assets’ income through various headwinds (think COVID), it is likely that this blended approach of furnished and unfurnished units will become the industry standard. Many of us affectionately refer to this blended asset as flex living.”
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Of course, the horror stories of nonapproved resident hosting still ring in some multifamily owners’ and operators’ ears when considering the idea of allowing residents to rent out their spaces—and guests having access to the community’s often high-end amenities. Before regulations were set, some residents took it upon themselves to rent out their spaces without permission, causing not only trouble for residents, but also their neighbors.
And while the concerns of short-term guests who do not follow community rules are valid, providers like Airbnb and Kasa have set processes to not only maintain the quality of the communities but transparency between the community and its full-time residents.
“Contrary to belief, guests are screened through Airbnb’s platform. Concerns about a constant flow of short-term guests disrupting community dynamics are mitigated by limits on the percentage of residents allowed to host and night limits. A key factor in the Airbnb Resident Host program is that hosts are primary residents hosting their unit ‘part time,’” Hill says.
Airbnb’s Stein adds, “We’ve certainly heard operators’ concerns about safety, overall building sentiment, and STR activity happening in buildings without permission, and we have successfully built a program to alleviate these concerns.”
Safety and security systems echo throughout other STR providers’ protocols as well. Pedan says, “The most sophisticated operators have made significant progress in trust and safety systems, creating value for the rest of the community and in reputation management, and revenue generation systems.”
When selecting a STR provider, Pedan recommends that multifamily owners and operators ask a series of questions regarding trust and safety systems. He shares, “In addition to doing background checks and utilizing decibel meters and ID verifications, ask, ‘Does the flex rental operator also have cigarette and marijuana sensors, predictive risk scoring, and motion and Wi-Fi over usage detection? Does the operator track incident rates, and, if so, how does their incident rate benchmark to others?’”
Outside of direct concerns related to short-term guests, he says it is important to look at how a particular program typically impacts the lease-up and value to long-term residents for the rest of a property as well as the online reputation of a STR provider’s properties. To look at guest review scores, a quick Google search of properties and checking TripAdvisor can paint a clear picture.
However, before even approaching the possibility of offering STR units or resident hosting, city regulations can pose some obstacles. Pedan says, in some instances, a regulatory approval process to operate a flex rental is necessary. “These processes can be as straightforward as an over-the-counter license obtainable in a week or a few weeks to a longer process. The longer processes, while more difficult upfront, serve as a deterrent for competing buildings from activating the same program and serve to distinguish a property that activates flex rentals from competing properties in the same city,” Pedan says. “At the same time, cities benefit from the added tax revenue from the occupancy taxes that flex rentals generate.”
He notes that STR or flex rentals can also add to city housing supply because they can help be the difference between a property that is able to access construction debt and equity capital to be developed versus a property that is not financeable. From his experience, he says, “In such a case, allowing a portion of a property to operate as flex rentals adds to the housing stock of a city since a portion of the property operated as furnished rentals allows for the whole property to get built.”
For developers, Pedan says Kasa units typically begin generating cash flow much earlier during lease-up and can generate cash flow in excess of a market rent at property stabilization.
Amid the country’s dire housing shortage, to finance more development through this additional channel is an opportunity that could rise in popularity. However, the newer STR industry has evolved—and will continue to evolve—in its brief time of operation. Stein says, “The pandemic caused a lifestyle shift for millions of people, and suddenly people could travel and work simultaneously. With many still working from home or in a hybrid model, this flexibility is a key part of the Airbnb-friendly apartment offering, allowing renters to take advantage of their flexibility from a monetary standpoint.”
In the near future, Greystar’s Hill says, “The STR or flexible living industry is expected to see consolidation among ‘branded short-term home managers’ due to funding challenges, regulatory restraints around ‘professional hosting,’ and lending requirements. Despite this, the demand for flexible living is not expected to slow down.”
She continues, “Resident hosting is poised to fill a portion of the gap resulting from a lack of supply of STR providers in certain markets. The sharing economy and the rise of digital nomads will continue to influence how the multifamily sector views alternative accommodations.”
While the addition of STR or flexible living options can present various challenges, according to all five professionals in the industry, the benefits of increased income and reduced cash flow risk can heavily outweigh the risks, especially in a time where market uncertainty is prevalent.
Pedan shares, “Flex rentals give owners or buildings access to a growing and not correlated demand segment. Take how they can be used to protect against future new supply in a market, as an example. As new supply gets built, a property without flex rentals will lose occupancy and thus cash flow.”
Yet, STRs and flex living options can provide added protection that is also easily removable if needed. He concludes, “A property with flex rentals can increase the percentage of furnished flex rentals [when a property loses occupancy] and increase exposure to the uncorrelated demand segment. This staves off a reduction in cash flow. Of course, if the flex rentals are not producing enough income, owners can always convert them back to unfurnished rentals. The impact of this is that a property with furnished rentals will have fewer volatile cash flows mathematically, which conceptually means the cash flows are less risky.”
As multifamily communities air on the side of hospitality through flexible and shorter stays, the same ingredients found in luxury hotels and exclusive clubs are making an appearance in apartment living.
Concierge services, unexpected amenities, and keyless entry are just a few additions many multifamily communities are implementing. Sentral president Lisa Yeh says, “In most multifamily communities, amenities like fitness centers and workspaces are simply a box to be checked. At Sentral, though, we’re committed to offering luxurious amenities and custom programming that bring residents together in fun and unique ways while creating an exclusive atmosphere reminiscent of a private membership club.”
She adds, “We also host a steady stream of unique residents-only events–everything from cooking classes to private performances by the San Francisco City Ballet. While we see rents slowing down in certain markets, Sentral is outperforming the submarket by up to 25% for our unfurnished products thanks to our ability to drive higher rents through our hospitality services and offerings.”
In addition to programming, real estate investment and management firms like Jamestown are launching new hospitality living concepts to boost the flexible living experience. In Atlanta’s Ponce City Market, Jamestown is developing Scout Living, a 405-unit development that prioritizes flexibility with virtual check-in, keyless locks, and 24/7 access to building and tech support.
The community will offer flexible lengths of stays from a single night to a year, and anything in between. With a rooftop pool, a wellness studio, a terrace, reservable residential-style living rooms, and a chef’s kitchen, Scout Living has been envisioned to provide the comfort and community of home with hospitality-inspired services and amenities.
“Over the past few years, there has been a shift toward a more meaningful integration of live, work, and travel,” says Michael Phillips, president of Jamestown. “Designed to meet that evolution and serve a broad range of lifestyles, Scout Living can be a starter residence for someone new to a city or home base for someone living and working across multiple cities. With Scout Living, we are creating a new, flexible living experience that recognizes the need to anchor home in convenience, connection, and community.”
Scout Living will provide access to food, services, and goods at the touch of a button, as well as private Wi-Fi networks, which will reach throughout the building, the firm says. Guests will also be able to request laundry and dry-cleaning services, restocking of necessities for longer stays, housekeeping, and more.
In similar fashion, with Placemakr’s mission of flexible-use hospitality and multifamily operations, the company continues to launch pop-up hotels through partnerships with multifamily owners and developers. The latest concept being Placemakr Cathedral Heights in the heart of Washington D.C.
Offering studios to two-bedroom units, the signature pop-up hotel allows guests the ability to experience what it’s like to be a resident at Upton Place, a newly constructed luxury apartment building developed by Donohoe and Aimco. The property houses 689 residential units, 150 of which will be available for short-term guest booking for a short period of time.
Source: Multifamily Executive
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