06/07/2015No Comments

@Scambiocasa: quando la casa diventa un’opportunità per viaggiare. #xdaysmi15

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“Il primo scambio è sempre un’emozione speciale e anche una preoccupazione grande per i mille dettagli da curare. Il nostro primo scambio è stato con una famiglia di Siena e di sicuro sarà indimenticabile. E’ la prima volta che vivi la città non da turista ma da visitante, la prima volta che invece di stare in una piccola camera d’albergo ti trovi in una casa ampia con personalità e tante possibilità, la prima volta che fai la spesa e cucini qualcosa nella tua nuova cucina e la prima volta che accetti e dai consigli e suggerimenti preziosi sul nuovo posto; questa prima volta non la puoi scordare.”

Così Alicia Jimenez, originaria della Spagna e residente a Torino, racconta il suo primo scambio effettuato grazie a Scambiocasa.com, il più ampio circuito nello scambio di casa e di ospitalità nel mondo.

Quando Ed Kushins fondò l’organizzazione (in inglese HomeExchange.com) nel 1992 in California, era convinto che lo scambio di casa fosse l’alternativa ideale alle formule classiche di soggiorno quali case in affitto, alberghi o villaggi turistici poiché tale formula permette, a costi ridotti, di viaggiare, da solo, in coppia, in famiglia o tra amici, al di fuori dei sentieri battuti dal turismo di massa.

Tutto quello che bisogna fare è iscriversi al portale e mettere a disposizione la propria abitazione iniziando a progettare la propria vacanza.

E così ha fatto Alicia qualche anno fa, diventando uno dei più di 63.000 soci di HomeExchange.com in 154 paesi del mondo.

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“Dopo il primo scambio c’è stato di tutto” racconta “scambi in Italia, paese meraviglioso ma un po’ caro per il turista, in Europa (Francia, Inghilterra, Irlanda, Danimarca, Olanda, Repubblica Ceca) e perfino in America (tre mesi in Canada in quattro case diverse più una settimana a Chicago). Scambi simultanei per la maggior parte perché questa è la nostra casa ma anche non simultanei (in questo momento ci devono uno in Grecia e un altro a Seattle e non vediamo l’ora di andarci). Brevi o lunghi. Con prime o seconde case. Ci sono state case piccole, grandi, vecchie, nuove, con il giardino o senza, in centro o in periferia, in città e in paesini. Con architetture e stili tanto diversi.” Già perché non è vero che si possono scambiare solo case grandi e belle, Scambiocasa.com offre una varietà unica di appartamenti e dimore, che riflettono la diversità delle persone che scelgono questo nuovo modo di organizzare le vacanze. Molto spesso un piccolo appartamento nel cuore di una grande città è molto ambito e può essere scambiato più facilmente, magari con una grande casa sulla spiaggia.

Bali

“Del primo anno ricordo in particolare la deliziosa casetta tradizionale nell’isola di Valentia Island, in Irlanda, in un micro paesino bellissimo. Nel secondo anno abbiamo vissuto un mese a Montreal in pieno centro, nel bellissimo quartiere di Mont Royal con giardini e parchi dappertutto. Ci siamo sentiti abitanti di quella città per quel periodo. Ci sedevamo sui nostri gradini di casa la sera a veder passare la gente e abbiamo anche fatto amicizia con i simpaticissimi vicini cileni. Dell’anno scorso non posso non parlare dell’incredibile casa dell’Ottocento con un giardino gigantesco a Moordrecht, un paesino olandese vicino a Gouda. Quando eravamo sdraiati nel nostro giardino a guardare tutti i tipi d’imbarcazioni che passavano davanti a noi sul canale, abbiamo creduto di stare in un film. Quest’anno invece all’ultimo abbiamo deciso di andare a visitare un nuovo paese, la Repubblica Ceca e una gentile famiglia ha accettato la proposta al volo e ci ha lasciato la loro casa di Praga nei giorni che volevamo noi. Non è incredibile?”

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Bello, vero? Ma come allontanare preoccupazioni e timori legati al lasciare la propria casa a sconosciuti? Il motto condiviso dagli appassionati di Scambiocasa.com, e da tutti coloro che si affidano a ScambioCasa.com, è “Tu sei nella mia casa mentre io sono nella tua”, per cui è molto probabile che all’inizio le persone con cui si scambia la propria casa abbiano le stesse paure. L’essenza che sta alla base di Scambiocasa.com e dell’intero circuito di HomeExchange.com è il rispetto reciproco per uno scambio basato sulla fiducia tra le parti. Se poi si vuole partire tranquilli e sereni, basta qualche accorgimento come mettere da parte gli oggetti preziosi, in una stanza chiusa o in cassaforte. Ma pensiamola anche così, fare uno scambio permette di avere sempre qualcuno in casa, il modo migliore per dissuadere i ladri mentre si è in vacanza.

Tanti i vantaggi dello scambio casa, ce li racconta sempre Alicia “Risparmi soldi ma soprattutto conosci posti nuovi, posti nei quali non saresti mai andato e che si possono rivelare unici, e anche gente nuova, che a volte è molto chiacchierona e finisci per fare amicizia con loro, e altre sono più formali ma non mancano mai di darti informazioni e di offrirti il loro aiuto per qualsiasi cosa. Ti senti protetto, ti senti accompagnato.

Poi per i bambini non c’è modo migliore di viaggiare, loro arrivano a ogni casa nuova con un’illusione fuori dal comune e corrono a scoprire ogni angolo sentendosi subito come a casa loro. E’ un’avventura, qualcosa di magico.

Bergamo-studio

Non solo una vacanza ma anche un’occasione di crescita “Abbiamo imparato ad adattarci a tutti i tipi di letti, di bagni, di elettrodomestici, di condizioni. E adesso ci sentiamo più aperti, più dinamici, più ricchi in tutti i sensi.

Mi sento di raccomandare questo sistema a chiunque ami viaggiare. L’ho già fatto, alcuni amici e conoscenti si sono iscritti grazie alla mia testimonianza. Finché vivremo, continueremo a fare scambi. Questo è sicuro.”

Curiosi di saperne di più?

Scambiocasa vi aspetta a Experimentdays 2015!

10/07/2013No Comments

on how the house is also a hotel – special summer post!

something wonderful happened during my previous summer vacation. I fell in love! It happened just before the vacation when I realized: Hey, i am traveling with two small children... maybe i should book some rooms in advance...

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It was almost too late. The places i found were either too expensive or not suitable for us. I was sure i could find some affordable 4 bed bedroom in a hostel. This is what i wanted. I wanted a simple room and the possibility to use a kitchen. Using the kitchen when traveling with the family is really important. 1) you save a lot of money 2) you can prepare a nice simple dinner that everyone likes. 3) you don’t have to hear your 1 year old baby crying for one whole hour before you find a way to warm her some milk. But, it wasn’t so easy. Some hostels do not have 4 bed bedrooms, others did not have a kitchen, for others it was clear we would be surrounded by very young high/drunk people that we will end up envying for the whole time. So... ok, let’s look for an apartment. And then my love story begins. I sign up for Airbnb. NOW... I know a lot about airbnb. I red about it, heard about it, know people who used it. But, until the moment i began using it i did not understand the MAGIC. So, I don’t want to tell you EVERYTHING about the company. You can read some about it all around the web or in the book “what mine is yours” for example or HERE or HERE. To make a long story short it is an online platform allowing to rent rooms or apartments between privates. So I looked for my room. The platform is really easy to use, like any booking system you put your destiny and dates for a basic search. Then you get information about the rooms/apartments and can either book directly or contact the owner. I realize then that i did not need necessarily an apartment, i could have a room, but for this I need to contact people directly. I write my msg to the first person and send it. The system suggest i contact similar offers. I do. I copy my msg thinking to personalize it and send it again, but when i reach the page i see this has already done for me! the site copies your last msg, taking off the personal name. (So, if you wrote “Hi Dany”, the system would automatically leave only “Hi”). Small things that makes you feel everything is thought for you. OH...those small signs on a first date... (ahhh.... he just cited my favorite book). Going on with my date i loved:
- The cancellation conditions system that is clearly explain with THIS
-  Road directions made for you
-  Easy format for leaving reviews.
- THE WISH LIST!! (i was just asking myself sometime ago why booking.com doesn’t have one... and here goes...)

Screen Shot 2013-07-10 at 9.59.26 AM
The App for android is also good. Some things are more complicated to do, but you can have extra options like “find me a place for tonight” based on your location.Using the digital interface was great!!
Then, When we reached the places we booked it was very interesting to see the stories behind the people. In the first place, a girl was renting two rooms all summer to save some money. She lived in the living room for that time (it is a separate room). A nice way she found to offer her guests a morning coffee was to leave beside the bed coffee capsules for her coffee machine. The second one had a completely different story: a girl rented a whole house for summer vacation in the center of a very charming summer town. To cover her expenses she sublet the other two rooms. It was a very simple situation, but the only way to stay in the center without paying a lot of money. So, Airbnb allows people to get creative about their life and make some extra money if it is for everyday life or vacation.
What more can be done??
- I was thinking about this specific situation of renting a room in a place where you live. The small things that could make it easier to do might be: stickers to put around the place, like: smoking area, Shampoo for common use, This food belongs to ….
There could be an open directory of stickers to download and print out. People that get use to travel in this way will be happy to find the signs they already know, but this will not take off any of the personalization of the place. An on the spot evidence of the service.

airbnbstichers
- A family friendly “certification”. If people declare they have some specific objects like a high chair a baby bed or other can have a special sign on their website. for me it would have made the difference. It is not enough to know that they are suitable or except families (even though it is very important), but as airbnb users begin to have competition, it can be a plus for them to have a way to diverse their offer.

This is what you see today:

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It might show as a badge after the people who are renting out have filled a dedicated form

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To end, my love story will continue in the next vacations, i found the better version of the hostel and i am not letting it go!

12/09/2012No Comments

On how to make your life a little more like summer vacation

In my last two posts i talked about my two latest summer vacations. well, it is easy when we go on vacation. but what about our everyday life?
When we go on vacation we tend to leave behind our “serious personality” and be for some time “on vacation” that might mean wearing nothing but a bathing suit for two weeks, losing a sense of time and routine, eating differently and so on. We take away barriers and we don’t care and worry as much as we do everyday. (this is the whole thing about vacation, no?) So when we go back to our normality we should keep some of this spirit to help us be more collaborative and therefore more relaxed! what do i mean? Remind yourself these five points as a beginning:

1. relax - you can live with less
2. relax - you don’t really have less. you just own less. you share.
3. relax - collaboration can make our life easier
4. relax - putting your time for the community is actually saving you a lot of time
5. relax!!!

share your time and spaces: when we are in vacation we often share our spaces. a typical example is sharing an apartment. For some time we have a common kitchen with our friends. This might mean that we take turns on who is cooking or cook meals together. I often learned new recipes in vacation because someone cooked for/with me. When we talk about common kitchen in normal houses, people get really scared. The think: “ and what if my neighbour cooks something i don’t like?” “how can i cook for 10 people?” and finally “ i would like sometimes to just eat alone in front of the television” . But if we take our vacation spirit and bring it here the thoughts should be more like: “ maybe my neighbour can cook stuff that i don’t know yet!”...” “if I ask my friend for help we can cook for 10, then for the next 4 days I don’t have to cook!” “tonight i feel like eating alone, but tomorrow i’ll join the group”. Sharing your spaces can be really easy if you loosen up a bit and open your mind. Same thing for other spaces like lavatory, craftsman workshop, a children room etc. The time you dedicate to these activities or to the maintenance of the spaces is usually much less that you would put in when having your own space. not to speak about economical costs.
These advantages are great for everyone, but some groups enjoy them even better. Families with children and elderly people. In families for example, one finds that routing and timing become part of life and that dinner must be served on a certain moment. Many families in the same building are having difficulties to come back from work, prepare dinner and sit together nicely. If there would be collective solutions, one family could worry only one evening a week for example. and it is a lot! For elderly people, not only it is usually easier to have similar hours for cooking and dining, socialisation is incredibly important. Many elderly people came to our new building. They came in couples or alone and they have small apartments. Most of them have difficulties in the new environment. Again, common kitchen and dining rooms can really assist those people in feeling part of a community. Ask the Swedish! they are real experts in co-dining. in fact, it is already in the housing contract that one must be part of a cooking group. If you want to know more, you can read something here, thanks to the expert Dick Urban Vestbro:

Collective Housing in Sweden
I learned about Alva Myrdal work from Dick Urban, and I wish to finish my post with her phrase from the ‘30 (!!)

“Urban"housing,"where"twenty families each in their own apartment cook their own meat-balls, where a lot of young children are shut in, each in his or her own little room – doesn’t" this" cry" for" an overall planning, for a collective"solution?”!

So, don’t forget the five rules, relax and make you everyday life a little more like your vacations.

27/08/2012No Comments

Let me tell you about my (collaborative) vacations (first part)

Vacations are perfect for some collaborative housing! The fact that we stay there for limited time gives us more courage to share some spaces and activities. We often rent a place together with friends and family, eat together almost every evening and… we love it! Interesting to think how we could bring some of our vacation spirit to our everyday life, sure… we leave the sea behind and have to be all practical and efficient. Nevertheless, I think it is possible, but, to begin with, in the two following posts I would like to speak about collaborative vacations.

Last year I had a great experience in a place called Gran Pino. My daughter was to be born in summer and we planned a very relaxing time. Some friends suggested a place in Toscany. They told us that it is great because it is just 5 minutes walking from the beach, all meals are cooked for you and since many parents are attracted to the space there is a lot of collaboration between people, helping each other and socialising. The price was also interesting… so we booked two weeks.

Gran Pino is a house that is rented by the association “amici della natura” or Friends of Nature. The association takes upon itself to offer houses for self-management in very good prices, so that tourism can become more affordable and based on people’s organization. This house was the first one in Italy. It is a big house from the ’70 with many rooms, a kitchen and a big area around it.

My first impression was: “oh my god! Where did I come with my 3 weeks old baby? This place is falling a part!!”  We had a very small room, one of the few rooms with toilet. The garden had an abandoned look, some games for children were falling a part, and generally everything seemed a bit left to its destiny. It did not take much for us to understand that the place is self-managed, so if we wanted it to be nicer we could just do it. A small clean up in front of the room, a small tent for the children and some other small stuff made the place feel more like home.  Eating together is also great, and when meals are cooked for you, it is even better. During July and august, it is to difficult to let people manage the kitchen so a cook makes three meals every day with fresh products from the vegetable garden. A bell announces lunch and dinner and the cook comes with big pots to serve everyone, like in a big family. Each one of us had to wash the dishes after eating, dry them and put them back in the place. As we were there with a group of friends, we took turns. Each room is responsible for cleaning some of the common areas two times a week. (for example the toilets, the showers and the dining area.)

By contributing ourselves we managed to have a very nice vacation, spending only very few. The feeling of being part of a group is great and adds a lot to relaxing, especially if you have children. Sure, some work has to be done to improve the house and the garden that requires more effort and money. Luciano, one of the founders of the association in Italy told us they are not having an easy time in Italy and therefore cannot offer things as good and cheap as they would like. The state did not give any help to the association, where in other countries for example Germany, some houses are given for free to the association.

So, relaxing by he sea side without going to the other side of the world, enjoying good and fresh local food and collaborating to have better prices and sociable moments. This is what I call a collaborative sustainable vacation!

This year, I used a collaborative service you all probably know: Airb&b. I will write about that in my next post. In the meantime, good coming back to the routine!