As spring progresses we’ve been finding ourselves in our garages and basements digging out the rakes, shovels, hoses, and other outdoor implements that have worked their ways behind last winter’s accumulations of “stuff.” Every season some items move closer to the doors, less used items are packed closer to the walls. The things that haven’t been used in a couple of years are grouped by the spring three-way sort of “trash, donate, sell.” At least in our houses. Maybe not in the 10.8 million households that rent storage units.
There is a pretty big chunk of people who are renting a pretty big chunk of real estate for a pretty big chunk of money to hold a pretty big chunk of junk. According to the trade group the Self Storage Association, over 50,000 storage facilities house over 2.2 billion square feet of storage space. The average unit goes for about $120 per month and holds…we’re not sure.
It’s not like we are running out of space at home. In the last forty years, new home construction in the US went from an average of about 1,400 square feet to about 2,400 square feet. In those same forty years self-storage units went from almost none (the first units starting cropping up in the late 1960’s), to enough to fill up Manhattan three times over. Again, what’s in those spaces?
Does anybody hand anything down any more? We all grew up on our older siblings’ cribs and high chairs, their tricycles and bikes. When families ran out of younger children those items got passed on to cousins, neighbors, and co-workers. What we couldn’t sell ourselves at garage sales we brought to church for rummage sales. Without the stuff we don’t use anymore, thrift stores would be out of business. But people do hand things down and there are still rummage sales, and thrift stores are booming. So what is in all those storage units?
Maybe what gets handed down the “handed to” group doesn’t want to use but are too embarrassed to tell the “handed from” group. Maybe they keep the extra dining room set in their storage unit and tell Mom that as soon as they paint the dining room those old table and chairs will look great in there. Maybe people are getting married so late in life they already have everything they need. But it’s a wedding. They still have to register somewhere and get newer stuff. Then when the gifts are opened they can’t discard the old toaster because it’s been so good to one (or both) of them for so long it gets a special place in mini-storage.
Or maybe it’s just junk in those garage-looking units and once it is there for a couple years the owners stop paying rent and someone can bid $5 on Door Number 3. Then they can figure out what to do with an Atari 64 game system.
We don’t know what’s behind Door Number 113,433 but whatever it is it better be pretty important. The average American family is spending about $1500 a year to store it. That’s about $500 more than the average American family gives to charity. We’re not sure if there’s a connection there but we thought we’d mention it.
Now, that’s what we think. Really. How ‘bout you?