first apartment

Apartment Hunting: Part Two

Looking for an apartment can be an overwhelming experience if you’re doing it for the first time.  Earlier this week I shared some of the pitfalls to watch for while searching and here are just a few more…

Furnished or Unfurnished?

Are you moving out for the summer only to go back to a cramped dorm over the school year?  Consider getting a furnished apartment.  Just stocking a kitchen can add up very quickly even if you buy the cheapest things you can find.  To make matters worse you will have to throw or give away most of the items when you move back into the dorms.  Storing whisks, pans, potholders, colanders, knives, plates, silverware, measuring cups/spoons, food storage containers…. You get the idea, it adds up!

 

Your Landlord and You

Above all, get everything in writing!  Landlords can be very tricky, so assume the worst and hope for the best!  I once rented an apartment from what seemed like a very nice old woman but when move-out time came around, she became very stingy about giving our security deposit back, even insisting that we pay to have a rug cleaned that was stained from the day we moved in!  What was obviously a cheap $5 pan she got at a garage sale became a $50 top-of-the line frying pan on our itemized security deposit list.  In other words, take pictures of the apartment beforehand, and both you and the landlord should sign off and date the photos.  Your landlord might give you a hard time, but don’t fall for the act.  Seriously, be tough and stand your ground!  It can mean the difference between getting your deposit back and not—hopefully it never comes to that, but watch an episode or two of People’s Court and you will have an idea of some of the ridiculous things both landlords and tenants try to do to save money.  Landlords are trying to protect themselves from you with the lease.  Do your part to protect yourself.

A landlord can make or break your rental experience over the summer.  Imagine that your toilet keeps backing up but your landlord doesn’t get back to you for a couple of days after each phone call—when they finally do respond it’s with some drain-o and a toilet snake! (and not maintenance man).  Or you get a water leak and your things get damaged.  A conscientious landlord will respond quickly—a bad one won’t care at all about your damaged stuff.  It’s not their responsibility to pay for it after all!

 

Other Ways to Save Money

Hulu plus accounts and Netflix have saved my roommates and I a lot of money in cable costs recently.  I’ve found that if I get the lowest cable plan I don’t get the channels I want anyway.   So you wind up paying $70 for T.V. a month.  That’s over a week’s worth of groceries or 2.5 tanks of gas!

Happy hunting!

-WonderBread

I’m reading Code of Ethics for Nurses With Interpretive Statements

Apartment Hunting: Part One

Looking for an apartment can be an overwhelming experience if you’re doing it for the first time.  Here’s how to start and the pitfalls to watch out for!

Location

You open the classified and see an apartment for an amazing price.  The only problem?  The area of town is not the greatest, and it’s a high crime area.  I’ve had friends make this mistake and they had break-ins and items stolen.  Plus, they had to sacrifice peace of mind.  As a young adult, our schedules are conducive to late nights out–right when crime levels reach their peak.  If you absolutely cannot swing an apartment in a safe area, check out this website to find out where your neighborhood ranks in the area: http://www.neighborhoodscout.com/neighborhoods/crime-rates/

With gas prices as high as they are, another factor to consider is how far away all your basic stops are: your job, grocery stores, your best buds.  A good rule of thumb is to get those three things within a 25-mile radius if possible.  The last thing you need on an intern’s salary is to be driving all the way across town daily!

 

Utilities

Utilities will cost much more than you think. You’ll have to ask exactly what it includes. Be sure to ask about: heat, water, cable, electricity, internet, sewage, trash, gas, security, maintenance, telephone, and then ask if there is anything else (so you don’t get trapped in hidden fees).

As a rule of thumb, “all utilities included” means water, gas, and/or electric (but double check with your landlords). Usually, it doesn’t mean cable, telephone, and internet are included, but sometimes the apartment complex will add them. Just be sure to ask.

If you can make it happen, sharing Internet is something I have done in apartments I’ve rented in the past.  One person has a router, gives the other tenants the password and then we all use that wireless and share the bill.  This can be risky for whoever has the router, but if everyone can give a good amount up-front, the benefits far outweigh the risk.

-WonderBread

I’m reading Nutrition: Concepts and Controversies

Moving Home: What To Do With Your Stuff

At the beginning of the year you feel organized and ready for what’s to come. You have your closet and shelves arranged just the way you want, and your drawers organized perfectly. There is nothing hiding under your bed or shoved on top of you desk. You promise yourself (and your roommate) that it will stay this way all year.

Fast forward to May. Finals are over, classes are done and you are now faced with the daunting challenge of not only cleaning your room, but packing it. Somehow the “clean” space you once set up has morphed into a sinking hole of stuff. You have shoes here, there, behind that, under there. Your books are stacked, your papers thrown; nothing is where it once was. How did that happen? Where did the time go, or more importantly, where did all this stuff come from?

Regardless of where it came from, you have to get it together—literally, and move out before the semester is over. This year it took me three days to pack my room. One day to wrap my head around the amount of physical stuff I had to pack, and two to actually move and organize it.

I don’t want the same thing to happen to you, so let’s lay some ground rules. How are you going to go through your stuff and be sane enough to make the journey home? Don’t worry, no stress. There is an easy way to visualize and prepare for the task that lies ahead. Take notes, grab some water, and maybe change into some workout clothes! (I’m not ashamed to admit that I broke a sweat just starting to think about compacting my room into rubber maids—whew, what a workout!)

First, you need to mentally prepare. Put on some music and wrap your mind around what you’re about to do. This is a big job. It won’t take five minutes, and it doesn’t need to take all day. Start small and work in areas! If you want to tackle the closet first, great! If not, try the drawers! Whatever puts you most at ease is fine.

Second, make piles. The great thing about college is that no one forces you to keep anything. Find something you know you’ll never need, or use again? That’s okay! But before you toss it, think about where it could go. Is it reusable? Could someone else benefit from the unused treasure that just emerged from under your bed? I would recommend making three piles as you organize: One for trash, one for goodwill or donations, and one for stuff to keep. This way, once you make it through everything you have a visual sense of what you’re taking with you, what you are getting rid of and what you need to find a new home for.

If you can, check with your campus for collection sites, or dorm drives. At some campuses student groups will hold collections for unwanted, gently used items that can be donated to local shelters, homes, and thrift centers. It saves you a trip, and goes to a good cause—win, win!

So you’ve made piles, you’ve organized your stuff into the must-haves and no-goes, so what comes next? Now you have to pack efficiently so if can all fit in the car. What has worked best for me over the last few years is rubber maids. You can buy them from Target or Wal-Mart for relatively cheap—or you can keep an eye on sales, you never know when they’ll pop up!

Storage bins are light weight, easy to pack, and fit A LOT of stuff in them. I broke it down into categories—one for clothes (most likely fall and winter since you won’t be using those anytime soon), one for desk and “school stuff” (stapler, hole punch, random paperclips, folders, and paper), and then one for bed stuff and towels. By compartmentalizing your room into categories you don’t get overwhelmed by volume. The simple categories are easy to comprehend and will make for easy unpacking and storage as well!

Don’t get stressed at the thought of packing your room. If you go slow, and take breaks—including some time to dance around to music, time will fly and before you know it your room will be empty and you’ll be ready and rolling out the door! But don’t forget—now that you’ve packed up your room, keep track of your system and take note of where you put everything. August will be here in the blink of an eye and it will be move in day once again!

-Ring Queen

I’m reading Organizational Communication: Approaches and Processes