When
Benjamin Capitano moved into his dorm as a sophomore at the King’s
College, a tiny liberal arts college in Manhattan, he realized he’d been
given a gift: a couch. So he listed his bed on Airbnb for $99.
“I’ve
always had a knack for hospitality,” Mr. Capitano said. “I got us
sheets and the little mini soaps and basically set up my dorm like a
hotel.”
At
Columbia University, New York University and the University of
Pennsylvania ($1,000 a night for a room for two during the pope’s
Philadelphia visit), students have been using Airbnb to offset the cost
of college. The listings tend to omit one fact: that the bed is in
student housing. (Potential guests, be sure to check pictures for
telltale dorm furniture, and reviews: “It’s in a dorm…. I sort of felt
creepy around all the kids,” said one guest at the School of Visual
Arts.)
While
most housing contracts prohibit rentals, lately colleges have been
reviewing their policies to ensure they explicitly mention Airbnb.
The
King’s College had only a guest policy. Mr. Capitano said he was
careful to follow the rules and submit the right forms to his resident
adviser — “conveniently, I was the R.A.” More than 20 guests stayed, a
bounty he split with his two roommates.
Read more @ http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/10/education/edlife/airbnb-becomes-dormbnb.html?_r=0

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