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Hupriene | 6 years ago

If you are really curious I can give you a few use cases I've seen that I think are valid.

1. There is a gap in housing between when someone moves out of their old place and when they can move into their new one. So they need to store all their stuff for a while.

2. Someone has a nice hardwood tree taken down in their yard and they want to keep the wood, but they don't want their garage /workshop to be full of drying wood.

3. Bulky outdoor sports equipment. Storing your kayak, etc. in your urban apartment may not be an efficient use of space.

4. If you are in business for yourself, you may need a small amount of warehouse space. The easiest way to get that in the US? Self storage.

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jpindar|6 years ago

5. Someone knows they're going to be moving soon, but they're going to have to do so in a hurry. So they put some of their stuff in storage ahead of time, thus making the actual move much easier.

6. Someone is going to be traveling/in the military/in the hospital/in jail/homeless for a while and can't or doesn't want to keep paying full rent just to store their stuff.

7. An older couple have houseful of truly nice furniture and/or tools but are moving to retirement home. Their kids/grandkids want the family heirlooms but don't have room for them - yet.

perl4ever|6 years ago

8. Have insurance that requires a car be stored in a locked garage, but live in an apartment without a garage.

maxerickson|6 years ago

Living somewhere else (say overseas) for a period of time.

distances|6 years ago

I thought I was clear about there being also valid use cases? I'm not disputing your examples.

dfc|6 years ago

Have you really seen #2?

perl4ever|6 years ago

The specificity would imply so.