I lived in two campus houses for a period over a year. The vision and concept were great, and it's failure should 100% not be read as a failure of the sector. Someone's going to do this right and make a big success. I don't know if they'll reinvent whole cities, Tom's full vision, but they'll make better places for people to live.
My personal view of why it fails (as a housemate not an insider to the business) was the following:
1. Too much money too early meant they spent more than they should on things which weren't necessarily valued. Examples being hot-tubs in all the early houses, the vacation houses (I get they were an experiment) etc.
2. Poor financial management. Property at it's core is a simple business and getting the accounting/billing right is vital. I suspect that the leadership team didn't have enough financial knowledge of the books to run such a business, needed a grey hair CFO much earlier.
3. Premature scaling. I assume pressure from investors and the economics models showed you had to get mega scale to get VC rewards, and this lead to pressure to grow too fast. I moved from one house to another and it was clear there was a difference in how carefully the inhabitants were selected and this weakened the value proposition (the second house had two separate groups with very different and competing goals from living together).
I really hope someone gets this right, and not just for 20 something year olds. When I get married and have kids I'd love to have 5-10 other families sharing common areas, responsibilities etc. Figuring out how to build that community element and make it scalable is the hard part.
The name for what you want is cohousing -- I know of at least four cohousing communities in the Boston area, and there are probably many, many more.
The usual cohousing model is (relatively) small apartments gathered around shared communal resources, in a condominium financial arrangement. Instead of the condo just being your share of a building, it's a share of the community. The fee is partially in money and partially in chores performed: helping to cook for a communal meal once a week, helping to clean up, helping to maintain things and make things better.
A cohousing community can generally afford better amenities than the people could individually: how often do you want to play piano? If you're not a pro, having a well-insulated piano room is really expensive - but justifying it as part of the community is easy. Want a really good home theater? A pro kitchen? Really good gardens?
The people I know who have tried cohousing have either left after the first year or decided that was how they wanted to live for the rest of their lives.
> If you're not a pro, having a well-insulated piano room is really expensive - but justifying it as part of the community is easy.
Or you could just use a digital piano with headphones. Much cheaper.
> The people I know who have tried cohousing have either left after the first year or decided that was how they wanted to live for the rest of their lives.
I imagine a lot of it depends on the other people. Tragedy of the commons can easily happen unless everyone shares the same standards of kitchen neatness, etc.
>Or you could just use a digital piano with headphones.
Not necessarily. The tactile feedback from the keys is an important part of playing the instrument. Properly weighted keys are for some reason very, very expensive to do well on a digital piano.
Some piano teachers will require that students practice on a real instrument after their first year of instruction. That way the student can figure out whether they really want to commit to it before making a large purchase, but a decent upright in the home is considered a requirement for further study.
More expensive than a $100 unweighted keyboard to be sure, but still much cheaper than a decent acoustic. Plus they can be played silently, can be used to record MIDI tracks, and you never have to tune them!
For the married and with kids solution, the term you're looking for is Co-Housing. We have friends who live in a co-housing community in suburban Boston, and love it. http://www.cohousing.org/ is the national coordinating organization.
> Someone's going to do this right and make a big success.
Berkeley has tons of student co-ops which are arguably a success in that the number of students applying to live there is much larger than the available space, and there are long waiting lists.
What I don't understand is trying to shoe-horn this into the mold of a for-profit startup. Co-ops can easily be run co-operatively as non-profits by their members.
A bunch of people living in a shared house on a non-profit basis isn't even a co-op, that's generally just a "share house". Share houses are fine, but they have disadvantages, such as the lack of a nice centralised way of finding and moving into one, and the fact that stuff like finding new tenants and negotiating interpersonal conflicts between tenants and kicking problem tenants out all have to be done by the residents themselves, and many (not all) people would rather just outsource all that stuff to a central authority.
So I think there's definitely room in the market for a company which deals with all that guff for you, in exchange for charging a somewhat higher rent.
I lived in a Campus house for a year, till they closed down. I made a lot of friends out of my roommates as well as the extended community. They really did a great job and it is so sad that they weren't able to make it a profitable business.
They removed the biggest issue with coliving : managing roommates moving out/in, being on the hook for rent if someone moves out and you can't find someone great in that short period of time etc. You just paid your rent+fee and they took care of everything else.
I've heard many stories of Campus members (=tenants) asking for ridiculous things from the support people, simply because Campus would provide it for them, no questions asked. "This is why we can't have nice things" came to mind frequently.
I was one of the 8 people to move into the first Campus house. All of the other 7 people became my close friends and I never regretted paying premium to be a part of that community.
Would I have chosen to do so without the community promise? Maybe. Would I have stayed long? Probably not.
It saddens me that the first I heard of this was the author hearing of its closure. We need to have a serious rethink about how we do housing, and building better communities is part of that.
This is too bad... I would be very interested in something like this. I'd be curious about more details as to why it failed as a business. Were its costs too high? I wonder if it was more or less a victim of the insanely high real estate prices in SF and NYC and whether it might have been more successful elsewhere.
I would say it was the standard reason which is the margins are too low (because of competition and then need for large amounts of human labor) to support a tech start-up valuation.
There are lots of potential businesses that have high demand, but you just can’t make money from them. It is relatively easy to build a business that customers love, what is really hard is to build a business customers love AND are willing to pay a premium to use AND which can be monopolized so your margins are not eroded by competition. These are rarer than unicorns.
The entire business model is s "how can we convince people in expensive housing markets to pay even more?" and it took this many words to wonder about why that didn't work?
Fuck these people and anybody dumb enough to buy what they were selling.
I'm moving into a Common in a few days. I'm paying about $250 a month more for a much nicer place with month to month flexibility than my friends living in a tiny 3BR with a 12 month lease. All in with utilities/internet/etc included it's about $100 more per month. It's pretty sweet. $100 more for a nicer place and full optionality is worth it.
I do think it's sustainable - you need to kind of see the house to understand, but they get 19 rooms into a building that would normally have 14 or 15. They can do this because of the way they organize common space all onto 1 floor, like a dorm. They sold out of all 19 rooms in the first building before they even hit TechCrunch - if they can keep occupancy approaching 100%, they'll be in great shape.
My personal view of why it fails (as a housemate not an insider to the business) was the following: 1. Too much money too early meant they spent more than they should on things which weren't necessarily valued. Examples being hot-tubs in all the early houses, the vacation houses (I get they were an experiment) etc. 2. Poor financial management. Property at it's core is a simple business and getting the accounting/billing right is vital. I suspect that the leadership team didn't have enough financial knowledge of the books to run such a business, needed a grey hair CFO much earlier. 3. Premature scaling. I assume pressure from investors and the economics models showed you had to get mega scale to get VC rewards, and this lead to pressure to grow too fast. I moved from one house to another and it was clear there was a difference in how carefully the inhabitants were selected and this weakened the value proposition (the second house had two separate groups with very different and competing goals from living together).
I really hope someone gets this right, and not just for 20 something year olds. When I get married and have kids I'd love to have 5-10 other families sharing common areas, responsibilities etc. Figuring out how to build that community element and make it scalable is the hard part.