The Day

College towns feel pinch from rental sites like Airbnb

- By STEVE LeBLANC

Cambridge, Mass. — Time was when renting an apartment in one of this college town’s funky triple-deckers or two-family homes wouldn’t cost an arm and a leg.

Now, renting in Cambridge can feel like that — something critics say is made tougher by short-term rental websites like Airbnb, through which property owners can make more money renting out apartments or homes by the night instead of a yearlong lease.

The debate over services like Airbnb — often criticized for essentiall­y turning apartments into hotel rooms, putting upward pressure on housing costs and driving out longer-term tenants who can’t afford rising rents — has raged for years in major cities. But it is also keenly felt in event heavy college towns, particular­ly ones that also are tourist destinatio­ns or are near them, like Cambridge, next to Boston.

Jennifer McConnell, a high school Spanish teacher who rents out rooms in her Cambridge brownstone through Airbnb, said she’d otherwise have trouble covering her expenses.

“It’s been a game changer both financiall­y, because it’s allowed me to stay in my home, but also emotionall­y because it’s filled up my home with guests,” said McConnell, whose guests included a woman from Germany who stayed for seven weeks while taking a graduate course at Harvard.

Short-term rentals have caused enough concern in Cambridge that the city council last month approved new regulation­s requiring people offering short-term rentals to live in the same building and undergo an inspection once every five years.

Picturesqu­e Boulder, home to the University of Colorado, last year began requiring property owners to have a license to rent to visitors. Evanston, Ill., a Chicago suburb that is home to Northweste­rn University, also has beefed up rules on rentals of less than 30 days.

Massachuse­tts Lodging Associatio­n President Paul Sacco hailed the Cambridge rules, saying they’re needed to prevent “illegal hotels” in the city.

Airbnb said it is not to blame for spiking housing costs. Only a small percentage of the Cambridge housing stock — about 140 homes or apartments — are rented through its website for more than 172 nights a year, it said. That’s Airbnb’s estimate for someone who is effectivel­y doing short-term rental as a business.

Interest in renting rooms through Airbnb often jumps during graduation or a big football game, said Will Burns, public policy director for Airbnb.

Visiting scholars and families of college students also fill rooms. In Cambridge, an annual rowing event on the Charles River also creates demand.

In the past 12 months, Airbnb said, there have been 90,000 guest arrivals in Cambridge through its service in the city of about 110,000.

Kirsten Rulf, a 36-year-old research fellow at Harvard Law School, said she used Airbnb for two weeks in August 2015 before finding permanent housing. The small, furnished room in a larger apartment cost her $1,500 for 14 nights, she said.

“For me that was the best option, because hotels are super expensive, especially in August,” said Rulf, who hails from Mendig, Germany.

A tour of Airbnb’s website reveals how much of a draw colleges are — at least according to those trying to rent out rooms.

“Perfect spot to visit MIT, Harvard, BU (Boston University),” reads one ad. “The house is within walking distance to the Princeton University Campus,” reads another ad. A third boasts, “Great ‘shotgun’ style apartment on a nice street in New Haven which is a short ( 5min) walk to Yale.”

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