In a city as notoriously expensive as New York, it's common to see people in their late 20s and early 30s living with roommates to help manage the high cost of living.
But Ishan Abeysekera has taken that to the next level with his current living situation in Brooklyn: a communal building that he shares with a whopping 23 other people.
"When I say I have 23 housemates, people are like 'What? That sounds wild,'" Abeysekera tells CNBC Make It. "But actually, it's quite nice."
The 33-year-old engineer lives in a space operated by Cohabs, a company that offers fully furnished bedrooms and communal living spaces for stays as short as 6 months or as long as a year or more. In addition to locations in Manhattan and Brooklyn, Cohabs has properties scattered across European cities including Madrid, Paris, London and Milan.
Abeysekera actually didn't set out to have so many roommates — or any roommates at all. When he first moved to New York City from London in late 2022 for work, his job put him up in a one-bedroom apartment in Manhattan's Financial District.
When he set out to find his own apartment, he looked all over the city for a one-bedroom that would fit into his monthly rent budget of $2,000 to $3,000. On a whim, he looked up communal living in Brooklyn and came across Cohabs.
When he went to tour the available room in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, he was immediately sold seeing some of the residents having dinner together in the dining area.
"How do you really meet people when you're new to a city? This seemed like a great way to do that," he says.
As a result, Abeysekera put pen to paper and moved in. He currently pays $2,100 a month for his room. His monthly payment also covers WiFi, utilities, household supplies, a weekly cleaning service and monthly communal breakfast.
He initially had a smaller room for which he paid $1,850 per month — along with $1,850 due up front for his security deposit — but upgraded to his current space when the larger room became available.
The four-floor, 24-bedroom building's tenants range in age from 21 to 36. Each person has their own locker in the communal living area, and the six refrigerators have enough space for each tenant to have their own shelf for their groceries.
"Sharing a kitchen with so many people is completely fine," he says. "You have your own cupboard to leave your stuff in."
The building is complete with coworking spaces, an outdoor patio and a finished basement with a massive couch that can fit all the residents at once. There's even some gym equipment and number of ongoing building-wide exercise challenges.
"There's so much shared amenities and space that you're never really in each other's way," Abeysekera says. "And everyone has their own space in terms of their own room."
Still, he admits that his current setup has "a lot of similarities" to living in a college dorm. But, he says, there's one key difference: "Everyone's a lot more respectful because they're more of an adult and more mature."
And just like some people you dorm with in college become friends for life, Abeysekera says he's formed strong relationships with people he has met through Cohabs.
"Being here has really helped me build a community and make friends," he says. "It's really enriched my life."
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!straggots !genx I pay a lot less to own more property and live with my soulmate, and it's in a quiet neighborhood (zero Rowdies !chuds).
Literally just be attractive and fall in love and get married in your early 20s.
Too bad that !zoomers went out of their way in the name of Antifa (German communists controlled by Stalin through the Third International !historychads) to redefine the American Dream as living in an Apple-App-Store HIV-Positive-Polycule. Go be a BIPOC somewhere else.
I hate you. I hate you. I don't even know you and I hate your guts. I hope all the bad things in life happen to you and nobody else but you.
Now if you'll excuse me I'm gonna go home and put some water in @Grue's mama's dish.
Good evening.
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No spark in life. Sad but at least happeened to someone like you .
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!r-slurs
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That last paragraph is the only thing that made sense to my ified brain. The rest is just noise
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born too late to feel the impact of the housing market crash
graduating just in time to buy a home at the lowest point in price and interest
Kurt Cobain committed suicide before he made a bad album
Keanu Reeves said "strag" in a movie
!GenX
Thanks !boomers
Get fricked !zoomers I got mine
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Not a fan of him but I have similar feelings about Bradley Nowell. Fortunately he continued to be a heroin addict and made great music. A lot of it being about how he was trapped by that addiction. Too bad it ended up killing him. #worthIt
One time, I think this was in college, I was in a classroom and these two stoner girls next to me were talking about how Sublime is great because that's who taught them to smoke pot. Jesus Fricking Christ. A guy writes a bunch of songs about how he's going to die because he's addicted to drugs and then he dies because he's addicted to drugs, and the only thing you take away from that is he's not saying weed is bad 100% of the time. I hate stoners so much it's unreal.
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finally, a boomer being honest for once.
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Don't hate me because I'm attractive.
Hate me because I was born within a three-year span where I could afford to buy a home in a severely depressed market.
!GenX
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What does your wife think about your terminal coomerposting?
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I don't pay her to think.
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One time we were talking to this girl from Iran who had just graduated high school. She said that she wanted to go to college and find an older guy about 30 and marry him right away. I completely lose it and say "NOOOO that's what we do in my culture!!!" She responds "That's what my mom did and she's really happy." I couldn't come up with an argument against that.
I dunno if she ever reached her goal. Last thing I remember her telling me was she was in a college up in the northwest and she said "Kordish boys are weird". Most 19-year old Persian girl thing you could possibly say.
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