कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
Overstaying Power
The Walrus
|July/August 2019
Airbnb is crowding our housing markets — and it’s refusing to budge.
AFTER LIVING in Vancouver for a year, Becca Young wanted to move back to Toronto with her husband, two-year-old son, and two cats. They looked for the right place for a couple of months and finally found it in a two-building condo complex near the waterfront. It was big enough for all of them, Young and her husband could walk to work, and there was a daycare nearby.
The couple moved in April 2018, and the trouble started soon after. As it turned out, they had chosen a complex that, according to the Toronto Star, had the most Airbnb listings of any building in the entire city — 300. The couple quickly had to contend with the consequences. Those ranged from almost weekly fire alarm pulls and elevator interruptions to loud parties and a wide variety of messes in the building’s common areas. There was even blood spatter in the lobby that stayed up for three days. “I always say that, when I close the door behind me, I love my building,” Young says. “But, between the front door and my apartment door, it’s pretty frigging awful.”
It got worse. In December, there was a shooting inside an Airbnb unit on a different floor, something that put Young and her husband on edge for weeks. “I kept having images of a bullet going through my son’s wall. He sleeps right next to the wall of the party unit.” A few months later, Young was verbally threatened by somebody after she tried to intervene with a man from the Airbnb unit next door who’d been shouting at a woman in the hallway. She and her husband have considered moving from the building, but the city’s increasingly hostile rental market made that idea a nonstarter. In April, they renewed their lease for another year.
यह कहानी The Walrus के July/August 2019 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
The Walrus से और कहानियाँ
The Walrus
Even Pigeons Are Beautiful
I CAN TRACE MY personal descent into what science journalist Ed Yong calls “birder derangement syndrome” back to when I started referring to myself as a “sewage lagoon aficionado.
5 mins
September/October 2025
The Walrus
MY GUILTY PLEASURE
BLAME IT ON my love of language, and blame that on my dad—the “it” being my unhealthy need for the stories of P. G. Wodehouse. The witty, wonderful, meandering, wisecracking tales of Jeeves and Bertie; Empress of Blandings (a prize pig) and her superbly oblivious champion, the ninth Earl; Mr. Mulliner; and the rest. Jeeves, the erudite, infallible, not to mention outrageously loyal valet to Bertram Wooster, the quite undeserving but curiously endearing man about town, is likely the most famous of these characters. But they’re all terrific, I assure you.
2 mins
September/October 2025
The Walrus
When It's All Too Much
What photography teaches me about surviving the news cycle
5 mins
September/October 2025
The Walrus
Annexation, Eh
The United States badly needs rare minerals and fresh water. Guess who has them?
10 mins
September/October 2025
The Walrus
We travel to transform ourselves
I grew up in Quebec during the time of the two solitudes, when the French rarely spoke to the English and anglophones could live and work in the province for decades without having to learn a word of French.
4 mins
September/October 2025
The Walrus
How to Win an 18th-Century Swordfight
Duelling makes a comeback
9 mins
September/October 2025
The Walrus
Getting Things Right
How Mavis Gallant turned fact into truth
7 mins
June 2025
The Walrus
Mi Amor
Spanish was the first language I was shown love in. It's shaped my understanding of parenthood
14 mins
June 2025
The Walrus
Odd Woman Out
Premier Danielle Smith is on Team Canada —for now
7 mins
June 2025
The Walrus
My GUILTY PLEASURE
THERE IS NO PLEASURE quite like a piece of gossip blowing in on the wind.
3 mins
June 2025
Translate
Change font size
