When 23-year-old Brandon headed from Massachusetts to the Bay Area in mid-May to start work as a software engineer at Google, he opted out of settling into an overpriced San Francisco apartment. Instead, he moved into a 128-square-foot truck.
The idea started to formulate while Brandon — who asked to withhold his last name and photo to maintain his privacy on campus — was interning at Google last summer and living in the cheapest corporate housing offered: two bedrooms and four people for about $65 a night (roughly $2,000 a month), he told Business Insider.
"I realized I was paying an exorbitant amount of money for the apartment I was staying in — and I was almost never home," he says. "It's really hard to justify throwing that kind of money away. You're essentially burning it — you're not putting equity in anything and you're not building it up for a future — and that was really hard for me to reconcile."
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11 comments:
two bedrooms and four people for about $65 a night (roughly $2,000 a month)
And we thought the rents in Salisbury were outrageous.
Smart way to start your life. Smart.
I watch the show about tiny houses because it fascinates me how much they can squeeze into a small area.However,there are the claustrphobic among us,myself included,who could not comfortably live in a small space.1000 square feet is my minimum.
Good for him. A great jump start.
Hope he doesn't die of carbon monoxide poisoning! :S
Anonymous said...
two bedrooms and four people for about $65 a night (roughly $2,000 a month)
And we thought the rents in Salisbury were outrageous.
October 23, 2015 at 9:21 AM
And that is actually $8,000 per month and $96,000 per year.
I just read another article last week where San Francisco rent is even higher than NYC. People are living in the wooden and steel moving crates to save money.
Anonymous said...
Smart way to start your life. Smart.
October 23, 2015 at 9:28 AM
Really?? Where does he wash his dirt @ss and brush his nasty teeth?
1:21 Like that bothers anyone on the shore.
1:21 Guess you didn't bother to read the article.
Come on. Read the complete article. He worked that out too.
I love the tiny house show. I could totally do that. The only problem is there are too many regulations that try to control what your build and live in.
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