23 December 2016

Short Term Apartment Furniture Rental In Delhi

If you’re moving because of work, you will probably be wondering how to move all of your furniture and if you need to sell any of it. You may also wonder if you should just store it somewhere and buy new furniture for the move, especially if its only a temporary thing. This means postings ads, having potential buyers come by to look at your pieces and fielding phone calls or emails. Moving furniture means hiring a company to transport it for you and buying new furniture means spending more money. Living in a hotel room for a long period of time gets very uncomfortable.

Rather than sending a delegate to furnish the employee’s temporary home or hiring a costly interior designer, a company can easily order furniture these furniture rental companies, schedule the delivery date, and have everything set up before the employee arrives. When the employee contract or apartment lease is up, the furniture goes right back.

Furniture can set the mood of a room or home. Traveling executives may need furniture that welcomes clients and makes them feel at home instead of feeling like they’re in a hotel room. Traveling nurses want to relax at the end of their long days and they need comfortable furniture to rest. Anyone who finds themselves in a temporary living situation deserves great furniture.

To help ensure you’re comfortable during your stay, short-term rental furniture for apartments, homes, and other dwellings designed to appeal to your tastes and make your new living space exactly what you need to be happy.

These companies  help to  quickly get you comfortable in your temporary living or working quarters so that you can focus on your other work priorities, and they do so by offering a wide selection of home furniture rental sets, bedroom rental furniture, and apartment furniture rental packages, which include everything from rugs, shower curtains, and bed linens to home electronics, hangers, and kitchen appliances.

They provide an assortment of different furniture styles ranging from traditional to contemporary and everything in between.

They also provide home appliances on rent. Home appliances like refrigerator are available on short as well long term rental plans. They provide branded appliances. So you can use these without any worry.
They provide doorstep delivery after you choose your piece of furniture/appliance for rent.

Resource :  https://furniturerentalnews.wordpress.com/2016/12/23/short-term-apartment-furniture-rental-in-delhi/

19 December 2016

Oakland fire: Warehouse owner Chor Ng elusive

This photo taken from video provided by @Oaklandfirelive shows the scene of the fire on Dec. 3.

It was the deadliest structure fire in the United States in 13 years.

On Dec. 2, up to 100 people were at a dance party at an Oakland, Calif. warehouse — known as the “Ghost Ship” — when the fire broke out, killing 36 people.

The warehouse had been turned into artists’ studios and illegal living spaces.

Investigators haven’t identified the cause of the fire, but they said it started around 11:30 p.m. in the rear of the building. They ruled out a refrigerator as the cause, but were still looking at electrical systems as possible sources.

There were no fire alarms, no sprinklers, and the two stairways from the second-floor party did not lead to the building’s only two exits.

The building, owned by Chor N. Ng, was permitted only as a warehouse and the city had opened an investigation last month after neighbors complained about trash piling up and people living inside of it. An investigation into the fire could lead to criminal charges as serious as murder, prosecutors said.

Property records show Ng owns several properties in Oakland’s Chinatown. She bought the building that burned in 1988, as well as an adjacent lot to the south and an adjacent building to the north.

The city has spent years fining Ng for what it calls “nuisance or substandard or hazardous or injurious” conditions at the lot south of the warehouse and at the building to the north.

Between 2005 and 2014, Ng paid $26,570.20 in “code enforcement” fees for the lot next to the Ghost Ship.

A beauty salon owner, Griselda Ceja, rented space from the Ng family for 20 years and had numerous problems relating to electricity in the building, which is adjacent to the Ghost Ship. “She never took care of the building,” Ms. Ceja told the New York Times. “We were scared. We were all scared.” She also says the salon had a blocked emergency exit that was never addressed, and she has since moved her business.

Other tenants, including an owner at Sum Yee Pastry in Chinatown, said he had no troubles with his building or the Ngs.

Neither Ng, nor her daughter Eva, who is known to help her mother manage these properties, have spoken publicly since Eva Ng gave a statement the day after the fire saying that as far as they were concerned, no one was living in the Ghost Ship space.

Questions have arisen, however, regarding how much the Ngs were aware of the construction that occurred inside the warehouse between 2013 and 2016, and whether they had set foot inside to see the substandard wiring and staircase made of wooden pallets.

The San Francisco Chronicle visited several other properties around Chinatown that are owned by the Ngs.
Those tenants describe Chor Ng as an unobtrusive landlady, who came to collect rent in a white Mercedes-Benz, and was generally “hands-off” otherwise.

One tenant who runs a clothing store in a warehouse next door to the Ghost Ship said the Ng family got in touch right after the fire to say they would help them deal with water damage to their property and help them reopen.

That tenant, Lorena Dominguez, told the Chronicle, “We’ve been here 25 years, and if they were bad landlords, we would have known.”
Resource :  http://nwasianweekly.com/2016/12/oakland-fire-warehouse-owner-chor-ng-elusive/

Castle Furniture Rental Announces Programs for Snowbirds Visiting Arizona

The team at Castle Furniture Rental is pleased to announce the launch of a brand new program exclusively for snowbirds.

Arizona has long been a popular destination for snowbirds escaping cold winter weather for warm getaways. Castle Furniture Rental is leveraging decades of short term furniture rental expertise to seamlessly cater to the needs of snowbirds.

Now, when snowbirds are looking for furniture in Phoenix and the surrounding areas, they’ll have an exciting opportunity to rent furniture.

Castle Furniture Rental is one of Arizona’s leading furniture rental companies. Launched in 1992, the company has grown extensively, yet still operates as a small business working fervently to provide high quality, customized options for clients. By providing options for snowbirds, the Castle Furniture Rental team has again demonstrated their ability to offer tailor-fit options for clients.

The team at Castle Furniture Rental offers an array of corporate and vacation furniture rental options, as well as student furniture rentals. The company’s services include professional, delivery, and set-up. Snowbirds are always happy to know that their vacation rental will be completely ready for occupancy. Not only does the company provide the essentials, but Castle Furniture Rental will provide and put away kitchen items, provide linens, and make the beds, provide and hang towels, provide televisions set the channels, supply artwork and hang pictures. If customers need a recliner or two, Castle has them ready and waiting. With the “Snowbird Getaway Package” all travelers need to do is bring their toothbrush.

Castle Furniture Rental serves all of Arizona with its short term furniture rental options.

Through the new program, snowbirds visiting Arizona as a winter getaway will have access to custom furniture lines created in partnership with American furniture makers. Each piece has been created with quality, comfort, and durability in mind.

According to Castle Furniture Rental, their long-standing relationships with various furniture makers has made it possible for the company to create various combinations of furniture at low prices.

Manager Diane Steigert said, “We are very excited about furniture acquisitions this year. We bring in truckloads of new furniture every year, but this year looks to be our best year ever. Each season we have more and more snowbirds coming to our beautiful state and giving us the opportunity to show them what real quality and customer service is all about.”

More information can be found at http://castlerents.com/.

About Castle Furniture Rental

Since 1992, Castle Furniture Rental has served customers in Arizona with premier, custom, and flexible short term furniture rental options.
Resource :  http://www.prunderground.com/castle-furniture-rental-announces-programs-for-snowbirds-visiting-arizona/0083461/

Owning assets no longer sign of prosperity and businesses are making most of the rental economy, writes Kunal Doley

Online rental start-ups like FunStation and Eves24 are giving a renewed push to a market that was, till about a few years ago, confined only to products such as cars and electronic items.

MUMBAI-BASED Kashyap Shah, a self-confessed Lego enthusiast, was once wandering in a toy store in the city to buy a set of the cult interlocking plastic construction kits when he realised that despite their global appeal and acceptability, Lego sets have become more and more expensive over time—today, a Lego set can sell for anywhere between R7,000 and R40,000 in India. After considerable research, the 31-year-old entrepreneur found out that there wasn’t one online toy library in the country that exclusively stocks Lego kits.

That was in 2014. A year later, Shah launched FunStation, a unique Lego-renting website that allows one to rent small and large Lego sets for a monthly membership fee and a fixed refundable deposit. “FunStation was born out of an idea to do something different related to children’s education and toys, and Lego is the best learning tool for kids,” says Shah, an engineer by education.

Currently, FunStation has close to 500 registered users. “It’s a new concept and people need time to understand it. But it’s slowly and gradually picking up. Till date, we have shipped over 400 Lego sets,” Shah adds.

Similar is the story of Eves24, a start-up offering unique jewellery solutions that enable women, among others, to rent out authentic gold and diamond jewellery against a security deposit. Sometime back, when Rahul Banka, its founder, was getting ready for a cousin’s wedding reception, he heard his aunt lamenting the fact that she would have to wear her emerald and pearl set once again, having worn it three weeks earlier for another wedding. “The desire of women to look their best is nothing but natural, especially at social events, festive occasions, weddings and parties,” says the Mumbai-based Banka, a chartered accountant by qualification. Thus was born the idea of providing a one-stop jewellery solution to Indian women—one that doesn’t cost much. Banka founded the website in July last year after quitting his job with Centrum Capital in 2013, where he was vice-president, investment banking. He also bootstrapped the venture.

Not just cars, electronics

Online rental start-ups like FunStation and Eves24 are giving a renewed push to a market that was, till about a few years ago, confined only to products such as cars and electronic items. Digitisation and the e-commerce boom have fuelled rental e-commerce and turned it into a mature market. The affordable availability of short-term utility, as well as luxury items, has helped in creating more acceptance for rented goods among Netizens.

In March this year, auto major Mahindra & Mahindra launched an online platform called Trringo, aiming to do for the tractor market what Ola and Uber have done in the car rental segment. The company has set up this venture as a start-up for farmers to rent tractors and equipment and in which it will invest upwards of R10 crore. “The drive to do this came from the fact that 80% of farmers in India are small and marginal, and for many, owning a tractor is a dream. So the question was how to reach out to these small farmers. That’s when we started uncovering the realities of informal renting practices in India,” says Arvind Kumar, CEO, Trringo.

Trringo works on a physical-digital model. Through the physical model, it has set up franchisee-owned rental centres, where tractors and a range of equipment are available. There is also the facility of training drivers on the correct usage of tractors and equipment. “As for the digital model, we have a call centre and an app-based order generation mechanism, making it convenient for the farmer to order from anywhere. A back-end system tracks orders, collects data, gives reporting and analytics on usage, and optimises utilisation of machinery,” explains Kumar.

Trringo’s current reach extends to Karnataka, Maharashtra and Gujarat, where it has around 13 operational centres. “In Karnataka, we also have an MoU with the state government that allows franchisees 75% subsidy on purchase of equipment worth R50 lakh. We are in talks with the governments of Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh too. We have served around 3,000 farmers so far and plan to reach 20,000 farmers by the end of the year with 165 hubs,” adds Kumar.

Why own when you can rent?

The idea is more about accessibility as opposed to ownership. “The majority of Gen-Y is not sure about where they are going to be in the next one year or so. When the future is not certain, it makes sense to rent rather than buy, as there is no commitment involved and you can return the products when you no longer need them,” says Harshwardhan Raikwar, co-founder and CEO of Guarented, an online marketplace for renting consumer durables based in Bengaluru.

“Today’s generation of consumers do not want to invest in assets, but like to invest in experiences. They are frequently shifting jobs and moving cities. So it becomes increasingly difficult for them to own and transfer assets. We are essentially trying to solve this problem by giving them a reliable and affordable option of renting the best-quality home appliances,” says Raikwar, who, along with former IIT-Kharagpur batchmates Abhimanyu Dikshit and Prateek Agarwal, launched Guarented in November last year after they found themselves in a soup when one of their flatmates had to leave the house, which they had furnished themselves. “This gave us the idea to build an ‘AirBnB’ for the stuff that makes a house a home,” he adds.

Ajith Mohan Karimpana, founder-CEO of Furlenco, an online furniture rental start-up based in Bengaluru, had a similar predicament. “I was working as the VP for Goldman Sachs in the US and while moving back to Bengaluru, I had to sell my furniture worth $5,000 for little over $300 on sale. That’s when I first experienced the perils of relocation—having to sell furniture,” says the former employee of Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.

“And to my dismay, I had to once again go through the harrowing experience of buying furniture from local vendors in Bengaluru. This is when it became clear to me that there is an opportunity to introduce a ‘rental furniture’ concept in India,” adds Karimpana. As a result, Rent Ur Duniya was born (later rebranded to Furlenco) in 2012.

As part of its services, Furlenco rents out premium furniture with matching furnishings and decor on a monthly subscription fee. The service also includes free doorstep delivery and installation, making it extremely convenient and hassle-free to furnish your home. It promises delivery within 72 hours of an order being placed with the flexibility to swap/return furniture annually based on need. The start-up has shipped $20 million worth of furniture till date to over 15,000 homes. Furlenco recently closed a large fund raise consisting of $15 million of equity led by Lightbox Ventures and Axis Capital, and $15 million of debt from banks, NBFCs, individuals and family offices for a total haul of $30 million.

As in e-commerce, fashion is a much sought after category in rentals as well. Sahyujyah Shrinivas, founder and CEO of online fashion rental platform LibeRent, says her start-up has been growing at 20% month-on-month since it launched in August 2014. “Our business model is simple: we source outfits, both western and ethnic, with accessories from designers and boutiques, among others, and rent them at just 10% of the retail price,” says Shrinivas, who is a metallurgical engineer by qualification.

Elaborating on her business model, Shrinivas says there is no deposit. The start-up delivers in Mumbai, Hyderabad, Chennai and Bengaluru. “In Bengaluru, we have same-day deliveries. We also custom-fit every outfit that goes to the customer to fit their measurements,” she says, adding, “Our USP is that we don’t have sizes like ‘small’, ‘medium’ or ‘large’. We have bust, waist and hip measurements. You just filter the options, using your bust measurement, and while booking, tell us your other two measurements. When we deliver, it will fit you perfectly. We also have an option of back-up dress, where you book two outfits, pay for the higher-priced one, try both at home, and wear the one you like.”

Another fashion rental platform, Stage3, is letting young millennials experience the glamour and style of superstars and celebrities. “Our customers can play dress-up with curated, authentic outfits from top designers that have been paired with accessories by our in-house styling team. Our mission is to make higher-end outfits accessible to our members and leverage technology to help them choose what would look best on them for different occasions,” says co-founder and CEO Sabena Puri, who started the platform with fashion designer Rina Dhaka and Sanchit Baweja in January this year.

As per Puri, Stage3 has grown 8x over the past 10 months and has raised a seed round from a core group of investors that include Nisha Kumar, the ex-CFO of Rent the Runway and AOL; Puneet Dalmia of the Dalmia Bharat Group (in his personal capacity); and Balaji Prabhakar, professor of computer science at Stanford University and chief scientist at Urban Engines.

Resource :  http://www.financialexpress.com/india-news/owning-assets-no-longer-sign-of-prosperity-and-businesses-are-making-most-of-the-rental-economy-writes-kunal-doley/477710/

Brisbane apartments: renters’ in ‘flight to quality’ amid unit slump

Brisbane’s apartment construction boom has spurred a “flight to quality” as renters move from old suburban flats into new apartments, in a phenomenon set to be watched by the Reserve Bank.

Brisbane renters are exploiting the more than 5200 new apartments built in the first nine months of the year to vacate suburbs between 5km and 15km from the central business district.

Vacancies in the middle suburbs jumped to 4.5 per cent, from 2.3 per cent in the last quarter, while unoccupied units within 5km of the city centre rose marginally from 3.4 per cent to 3.7 per cent, according to Real Estate Institute of Queensland figures.

REIQ spokeswoman Felicity Moore said it was a surprise to see the vacancy jump in the suburbs.

“We were expecting the inner ring to be where we saw that (higher) result,” Ms Moore said.

“We are expecting go see the inner rise in the next year.”

She said there were some large developments that added to the rental pool across the suburbs, and tipped a stabilisation in coming months.

The rollout of an expected 13,000 more apartments over the next 18 months in inner-city Brisbane, along with 16,000 more in Melbourne’s inner suburbs in two years, is being monitored by the Reserve Bank as the key areas for potential future oversupply.

In the apartment and construction hotspot of South ­Brisbane, the median rent for a two-bedroom apartment has remained $500 for three years. Another suburb in focus is Newstead, where the average rent fell $5 in the past year. Existing apartments are also offering deals including weeks of free rent to entice ­tenants.

Jenna and Derek Munkley moved into a two-bedroom unit with a 65sq m deck at the newly built Hopscotch Apartment building in Newstead in August, negotiating the advertised rent down from $650 to $570 a week.

For them, it was as much for a lifestyle change, with Ms Munkley, 31, now walking to work instead of commuting to her job at a bank in Newstead from the northern Brisbane suburb of Strathpine. “We looked at a lot of different units, and it’s definitely the renters’ market at the moment in this area,” she said.

In order to keep up sales and rents, developers are offering a range of incentives to get people into their apartments.

Increasingly, short-term rental guarantees of up to 5 per cent gross are being advertised, while others will throw in furniture packages, pay body corporate rates or shell out for furnishings.

A completed four-townhouse development in Morningside offered a Kia Picanto car to the first buyer to go unconditional. Ray White Bulimba agent Jared Candlin said the bonus car promotion was “a way to get people’s attention” in the crowded marketplace.

“They are a really good product, a very nice townhouse,” he said. “But with what is going on with the amount (of units) available, people might just miss them because they are looking at so many.”

Brisbane has come onto the Reserve Bank radar because of the concentrated geographical spread of the new apartments and the sheer number.

CoreLogic notes in a report to the bank that if the 49,000 apartments approved for development actually go ahead it will boost stock in the city by 25 per cent.

In Melbourne and Sydney, about 96,000 apartments have been approved but this is a relative increase of 16 per cent and 13 per cent respectively.

Property firm JLL reported 5169 units completed from January to September this year in Brisbane, with another 13,022 being built. Another 6422 are on the market.

It reported the median apartment price had fallen 1.2 per cent, counter to the five-year average of 1.1 per cent growth.

“Sales rates have reverted to normalised levels following a spike during 2025,” the Residential Commentary Brisbane Apartment Market report says.

Analysts and developers have pointed to the sharp decline in development and building approvals as a sign any oversupply will be short-lived.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics recorded a 28 per cent drop in monthly unit approvals to September and the yesterday the Housing Industry Association said apartment building was expected to fall 40 per cent by 2018-2019. Place Advisory estimates about 8000 apartments ­approved for development in Brisbane will not go ahead.
Resource :  http://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/property/brisbane-apartments-renters-in-flight-to-quality-amid-unit-slump/news-story/3d9de0463a5a4b33578e35c797667607

06 December 2016

The hell of finding a home to rent in the Netherlands

Attempting to rent a home in the Netherlands turned Julia Corbett into a paranoid spammer with stalker tendencies thrown in. She explains how the rot set in. After not one, two or three, but four properties slipped from my fingers I can safely say I have experienced the housing hell in the Netherlands. Our adventure began when my Dutch partner returned home after some years in England and I became a student in the Netherlands. It has been a more bumpy start than expected after experiencing a lack of suitable housing options. From Hilversum to Leerdam and Den Bosch to Busson, I have learnt that luck and timing has more to do with finding a place to rent than most people will feel comfortable with. My Dutch boyfriend of nearly five years took eagerly to the rental sections of housing websites and arranged a day crammed full of viewings of apartments, houses and loft conversions. Having donned a smart outfit and brushed my hair for the encounter with our future landlords, I found myself being scolded for turning up five minutes late to an appointment that lasted no longer than 30 seconds. We dashed in and out of the four rooms in a supermarket sweep-style daze, wondering where our furniture would fit, before we were ushered out and abandoned in the street as our suited agent sped off on his company moped. ‘Where is the carpet?!’ we cried at our next viewing only to be informed that carpets, paint and exposed piping were a luxury we must solve on our own. Dream evaporates Things seemed to be looking up when we met a new potential landlord, a 94-year-old retired businessman who rowed for 30 minutes every day and had a garden that was more perfectly manicured than the lawns of royalty. Would I like to live in the grounds of a mansion boasting nine deer, six chickens three dogs, a cat and six small caged birds? Yes, absolutely, sign me up! After my partner negotiated an agreement and I chatted to his wife in broken Dutch while being fed home-grown tomatoes, we skipped away from the viewing giddy with excitement.


A home, within our budget, complete with lovely landlord. Success! However, our property bubble was swiftly deflated when we tried to initiate the contract process, only for the estate agent to claim our new landlords no longer wanted us as tenants. Our upset turned to anger and paranoia: what was wrong with us? Why were we unworthy of their out-house? Deciding to carry out the somewhat stalkerish task of returning to the owners for answers, we learned that they had been told by the estate agents we were not interested and rented the property to someone else. Saturated market Though I try not to sound bitter about my experience, I have learned that our tale is not at all unusual for those who cannot yet afford to buy but must live independently. The average rental property in Amsterdam now costs €2,000 a month and businesses have claimed the city is unable to accept more growth because there is not enough suitable rented housing.


 For the first time the University of Amsterdam has been unable to match the demand for student accommodation and in other cities students are having similar experiences. ‘Just buy a house!’ has been a solution put forward by family, friends and colleagues, both who are expats themselves and those who were born and raised in the Netherlands. But that’s not the easiest thing to do either. The Dutch phrase Van ‘t kastje naar de muur – being sent from the closet to the wall – best sums up the experience of being forced to hunt down estate agents and demand answers and information, to discover only bad news. Meanwhile,

 our search for a home to rent and make our own, like many others in the same situation, continues.
Resource :  http://www.dutchnews.nl/features/2016/12/renting-in-the-netherlands-the-dutch-housing-hell/



Questions to Ask When Selecting Rental Furniture

Renting furniture is a great way to go when decorating and filling a new home. For students in particular, renting furniture is a great choice because they are often moving between homes between school years and do not have the budget to purchase all new furniture. It can also help students to afford the kind of furniture that they want so they are not forced to settle and only get the furniture they can afford, not furniture they like.

But there are questions that every student should ask in order to have the best rental experience possible. Read on to learn some important questions to ask when selecting rental furniture!
Environment

When you are choosing furniture to rent, you need to contemplate the environment you are bringing the furniture into. Is your home a quiet place? Are you barely home? Is your house the party house where everyone brings their own beers? Do you have pets like cats and dogs that run loose around your apartment?

These are all questions that will help you to determine the environment of your home and thus the environment that you will be bringing your rental furniture into. You have to remember that this is rental furniture and thus you will need to be able to return it in the same condition that you rented it in or you might have to pay some extra fees.

If you know you eat a lot on your couch, it might be best to get one from a material that does not stain easily. If your roommate never remembers to use a coaster, it might be best to get a dining table that will not get water stains. You know your own life best so remember the effects your life will have on the furniture that you rent.

Number of People in Home

Another question to address when choosing furniture to rent is how many people you have living in your home. You want to get furniture that can accommodate everyone that has to live there. Or perhaps you have a lot of guests that come over and you want to accommodate them as well. There is nothing less welcoming than not having enough seating for everyone you have invited over.

Perhaps that little yellow couch is adorable and would look great with the coffee table you already have. But if it is really only a loveseat that holds two or three people and you have guests over all of the time, you might need a bigger couch that can seat a lot more people.

Maybe you think that the 12-person dining room table is fabulous but if it is only you and your roommate living in your house, you might want to focus your attentions on a smaller table that will be more suited for your actual needs. Renting gives you the ability to get the kind of furniture to suit your own lifestyle that also fits within your budget. a

Length of Rental

Renting furniture can be great for students because your ownership of the furniture is only temporary. Once you graduate and leave your college town, you do not have to worry about what to do with the furniture in your apartment because it already has a place to go back to!

In order to make renting furniture really worth your while, you want to make sure that the length of renting meets your needs. If you are going to stay in one place the entire time you are in college without moving around or subletting, then you can rent the furniture for all four years. If you are going to be leaving to study abroad in the middle of your time in college or leaving during summers or staying in a home for only one semester at a time before hopping, you need to plan your rental lengths accordingly.

You need the furniture available for the whole time you will be in town and not to pay extra for the furniture when you will not be able to keep it for as long as you are paying to do so. Be sure to get a rental length that fits your college experience.

Payment Plans

As college students, one of the best benefits of renting furniture is the affordability factor. However, money is tight for most college students all around so you need to check and see what the payment plans are like when you are renting furniture to make sure that you can afford it.

You might not be able to afford paying the whole amount upfront so check to see if the company offers monthly or bi-monthly payment plans and that the payment amount is something you can afford.


Resource : http://www.uloop.com/news/view.php/220865/Questions-to-Ask-When-Selecting-Rental-Furniture

7 Reasons Why You Should Start Renting Furniture Of Your Choice Rather Than Buying It

Great. You bought an expensive, exquisite furniture for your newly rented apartment. But just after few months, you had to shift your place because your job demands it. Then, you look at the same furniture with the feeling of guilt and ask yourself,  Why did I buy this? Will it fit well in my new apartment? Should I just sell it now?

And eventually, because of not being able to rearrange it in your new apartment, you had to sell it at a price less than its market price. Within a moment, both your dream furniture and money swept away. Bad luck!

Well, to escape such a defeated situation, you can rely on ‘Cityfurnish‘ which offers a wide range of stylish, elegant and modern furniture on rent online. Yes, you can rent the furniture and major appliances for the required time period and then return it when your tenure is over.

Sounds cool, right? Well, there are many more reasons why renting a furniture is useful:
 1. As millennials are constantly switching their places and jobs, so, why buy a furniture for a place where we ourselves are not sure about the duration of the stay?
2. Renting a furniture is cost-effective.

When we buy a fully-furnished furniture, we have to pay the entire purchase at once. In renting, we can pay in affordable installments as per our financial situation. 
3. With the wide variety of snazzy furniture designs, renting gives us the opportunity to experiment with all the choices that suit us.

In case you feel bored with your current interiors, you can experiment a new look for a month’s time or more.

You can select suitable designs from here.

4. Gracing your home with different suave furniture packages will make your home look more vibrant.

5. On special gatherings and festive occasions, who doesn’t want to light up the dining room with 

exclusive furnishing at a low price?

Then, why buy a brand-new furniture when renting can give us the same comfort? 

 6. Renting a furniture is so hassle-free because you need not find a buyer to sell it.









 7.  If the piece of furniture you’ve rented does not work for your lifestyle anymore, you can rent another design.


These good reasons would have motivated you to opt for renting a furniture online. If you are thinking where to do it, then, ‘City Furnish’ is your reliable stop. You can explore their packages and products right here. To order the furniture online, click here and follow the procedure.  
Resource : http://topyaps.com/renting-furniture-of-your-choice