I just checked the rents in my area and I could rent a large commercial space for only $1k when absolutely tiny studios here are $1.5k minimum. I checked the building has 24hr access and I will be asking if it has a water hookup. Is it too risky?

  • xi_simping [comrade/them, any]
    ·
    11 months ago

    Biggest risk is like fire inspector, city inspector or someone coming in and seeing residential use in a commercial building and an eviction following suit.

    Might get away with an "artist studio" like user above aaidwith a work space in one corner and maybe a futon, basics in one corner and minimum appliances (mini fridge, microwave, kettle) it can't look permanent, which is hard.

    • the_itsb [she/her, comrade/them]
      ·
      11 months ago

      I think if it had break room vibes and were kept spotlessly clean all the time, that could build some plausible deniability maybe? Super ultra tidy doesn't look lived in.

      • YearOfTheCommieDesktop [they/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        11 months ago

        yeah this. You're totally allowed to have a kitchen in your office (though if it isn't already equipped for one you probably won't be hauling in nice appliances, no sense in building anything decent when you can get kicked out at any time), and you can probably get away with "hmm this seems like someone is just living here" with inspectors as long as there's no smoking gun (having a bed, mainly) and its not just super blatantly obvious. Even being a little messy can probably be gotten away with but it would raise less suspicion if cleaner (especially the more living oriented parts)

        Honestly having a lot of the area dedicated to obvious desk/work space would cover a lot of other red flags. if you have a 3d printer and a computer setup, and any other hobby workspace you might want all in there it's going to draw attention away from a break room style kitchen or a futon area that looks a little too lived-in.