That’s exactly right and that’s what my family and I did when we visited NY. We are a family of four. Typical hotel accommodations suck for families! As you pointed out, it’s not just the space, it’s also the cooking facilities that are so important. Our typical approach is breakfast in the unit, picnic lunches while touring around, dinner out.
Sometimes we’ll cook dinner in our unit too, especially for our kids. If you’re in a city for several days, you get tired of your kids eating pizza and burgers every night because nothing else is familiar (and they do too). They welcome a healthy home cooked meal with the simple foods they are used to. As such going grocery shopping in our new city of residence is a key early part of every trip.
I think the anti-AirBnB narrative also misses a couple of other things:
- this is a huge win for hotels, and one they have lobbied for fiercely.
- there are people who own apartments in NY that couldn’t afford to live there if they weren’t able to earn some money from renting out their space on AirBnB.
Lastly, I’m willing to bet that the housing crisis in NY will continue unabated despite this move.
> there are people who own apartments in NY that couldn’t afford to live there if they weren’t able to earn some money from renting out their space on AirBnB.
Yes, but also turning every apartment into a potential revenue source puts upward pressure on rents.
So there are also people who cannot afford apartments in NYC because of short-term rentals.
Sometimes we’ll cook dinner in our unit too, especially for our kids. If you’re in a city for several days, you get tired of your kids eating pizza and burgers every night because nothing else is familiar (and they do too). They welcome a healthy home cooked meal with the simple foods they are used to. As such going grocery shopping in our new city of residence is a key early part of every trip.
I think the anti-AirBnB narrative also misses a couple of other things:
- this is a huge win for hotels, and one they have lobbied for fiercely.
- there are people who own apartments in NY that couldn’t afford to live there if they weren’t able to earn some money from renting out their space on AirBnB.
Lastly, I’m willing to bet that the housing crisis in NY will continue unabated despite this move.