Airbnb’s co-founder Brian Chesky has opened up his San Francisco home allowing guests to remain in a personal room boasting “panoramic views” – however the only problem is, there’s no available dates.
Mr. Chesky, who founded the corporate in 2008 and has an estimated net price of just about $12 billion, recently listed his “thoughtfully designed suite” as a part of a promotion to encourage more people to rent out their spare rooms on the platform to earn extra money amid a cost-of-living crisis.
“Stick with me – the co-founder of Airbnb and its first host. Back within the day, my roommate Joe and I blew up some air mattresses and welcomed three guests – Michael, Kat and Amol,” he wrote within the listing.
“This time, I’ve upgraded from airbeds to a guest suite in my home. You’ll spend time with me and Sophie, my golden retriever, as I share stories from the early days – or you possibly can calm down in your suite, decorated with a few of my favorite pieces of Airbnb history.”
He said guests can have access to a full bathroom with a big shower and also can use the “spacious chef’s kitchen” or hand around in the “sunny lounge with floor-to-ceiling windows”.
Nevertheless, he has since been mocked over the publicity stunt as many have discovered that there aren’t any available dates until October 2024, when the stay period ends.
“One other PR stunt Brian, no availability in a zero price tag. You yet again delivered something unattainable,” one annoyed Twitter user wrote.
“No available slots ’til 2024,” said one other.
However the 41-year-old was quick to shut down the comments explaining on his Instagram he had “some weekends in January, February and March, but they booked out even before I posted this”.
“[But] I’ll keep adding weekends all year long,” he said.
While some branded the listing as “incredible” thanking for opening up his home to strangers, others were annoyed they missed out as available slots appeared to have been booked.
“Sounds great but there’s no availability for all the 2023 and beyond by the looks??” one person Tweeted, to which Mr. Chesky assured he’ll “add some more weekends soon”.
Some persons are so wanting to stay on the tech billionaire’s property, they’re even willing to purchase it.
“Anyone who got a slot willing to sell?” one person asked.
“When you get any, let me know I could buy it for even 69x,” added one other.
Mr. Chesky explained that when guests arrive at his San Francisco property they shall be treated to “Chesky Chip Cookies” on arrival.
“You’ll be served six cups of coffee before noon (identical to me),” he tweeted.
“We’ll work out together and train until total muscle failure (after we’ve eaten numerous cookies),” he added alongside a snap of a gym.
He explained his house is positioned near the Mission, Castro and Noe Valley neighborhoods with “loads of great boutiques, restaurants and low shops”.
“You’ll be just a brief walk from beautiful Dolores Park, Bi-Rite ice cream and the world-famous Tartine bakery for fresh bread and pastries. Also, guests must love dogs. Or a minimum of Sophie.”
Meanwhile, even hip hop mogul and sneaker connoisseur DJ Khaled will open the doors to a recreation of his iconic, viral sneaker closet for just $10.62 an evening.
Booking opens on Nov. 29 at 1 p.m. EST.
“Sneakers have at all times been a MAJOR a part of my life. Now, in honor of my upcoming We The Best Air Jordan 5 collection drop, I’m GRATEFUL for the chance to ask guests to kick it in my sneaker kingdom,” DJ Khaled said in his listing.
He said guests will have the opportunity to sleep in his “legendary” sneaker collection.
“Through the stay, guests can have the possibility to live and breathe Miami the identical way I do – epically. I’m rolling out all the massive stops, including an exclusive pair of We The Best Air Jordan 5s, a handwritten welcome note from me upon arrival and the keys to the final word sneaker kingdom, sleeping amid a few of my most prized kicks.”
Each listings come as a part of the corporate’s winter promotions after it revealed on Wednesday it recorded a “disproportionate” 31 percent rise in single-room listings within the third quarter, as more people sought extra income within the face of a cost-of-living crisis.
Based on Reuters, the corporate said property listings rose across regions, without disclosing specific numbers, and to assist the expansion, it unveiled an app update on Wednesday to make the method easier.
“We’ve seen loads of people being more interested than even before in hosting to defray their cost of living,” Mr. Chesky said, as high inflation because of the Ukraine war puts fragile household budgets under pressure.
Reuters reported about 46 percent of hosts on Airbnb said they used the extra cash from renting out properties to pay for food and other items, while one in 10 said it helped them avoid eviction or foreclosure, Airbnb said, citing a survey.
Some popular tourist destinations have, nevertheless, blamed the corporate for aggravating housing shortages, as landlords increasingly rent out properties to holiday-makers amid a surge in travel, quite than going for long-term tenants. Airbnb co-founder Nathan Blecharczyk, in an interview with Reuters, blamed rising rates of interest for making a shortage of recent homes, adding it has also been tough for the industry to adapt to buyers increasingly in search of homes outside big cities.
Meanwhile, the corporate said longer guest stays because of distant working will proceed to spice up results, as travel demand shows no signs of easing despite economic headwinds.