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  2. Rooming house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rooming_house

    Due to the sectors where rooming house residents lived, they often had to move, either due to seeking new jobs, because of seasonal work or due to layoffs, which meant that the tenants in a rooming house would change throughout a year. As such, rooming house residents tended to have only one or two bags or a single trunk of possessions. [8]

  3. Category:Boarding houses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Boarding_houses

    Articles relating to boarding houses, houses (frequently family homes) in which lodgers rent one or more rooms on a nightly basis, and sometimes for extended periods of weeks, months, and years. The common parts of the house are maintained, and some services, such as laundry and cleaning, may be supplied.

  4. List of African American hotels, motels, and boarding houses

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_African_American...

    African American hotels, motels, and boarding houses were founded during segregation in the United States, offering separate lodging and boarding facilities for African Americans. The Green Book (1936–1966) was a guidebook for African American travelers and included hotel, motel, and boarding house listings where they could stay.

  5. Boarding house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boarding_house

    One of the last remaining textile mill boarding houses in Lowell, Massachusetts, on right; part of the Lowell National Historical Park. A boarding house is a house (frequently a family home) in which lodgers rent one or more rooms on a nightly basis and sometimes for extended periods of weeks, months, or years. The common parts of the house are ...

  6. Transitional housing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transitional_housing

    Boarding house – residence that provides meals and a room to live in, with some communal areas; Rooming house – residence that provides a room to live in, but not meals; Single room occupancy – residence that rents rooms to individuals; Youth intervention

  7. Apartment hotel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apartment_hotel

    The term refers to the fact that the tenant rents a single room, as opposed to a full flat (apartment). SRO units may be provided in a rooming house, apartment building, or in illegal conversions of private homes into many small SRO rooms. There is a variety of levels of quality, ranging from a "cubicle with a wire mesh ceiling", at the lowest ...

  8. Bedsit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bedsit

    The American and Canadian equivalents to a bedsit are rooming houses and single room occupancy (SRO); however, in Canada those differ from bedsits in that rooming houses and SRO hotels generally do not provide tenants with private kitchen or bathing facilities; instead, those facilities are shared.

  9. Common lodging-house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_lodging-house

    In major cities, five story or higher rooming houses were common; in smaller cities, three or four stories was the norm. The fairly expensive, 40 cents-per-night lodging house usually had a mattress, chair and clothes hook. The most expensive lodging houses had a little dresser and a basin for water with taps. [5]