Storage can be used for many different reasons. If you're trying to sell your home you may want to free closets and rooms of extra clutter so that the place shows better. Maybe you have too much furniture for your new home; the kids have moved out but you can't part with all their childhood memorabilia; you want to store items for different seasons; you have stacks of documents that you need to keep but don't want them to take up living space.
No matter what the reason, finding storage units is made easy here with our direct link to self-storage companies located in your area. Within a few minutes you'll know what size storage is available, how much it will cost and determine which is best for you.
Despite their popularity, self-storage facilities have
always had a bit of an image problem. Often a speculative real-estate play for
yet-to-be gentrified areas (several of the biggest self-storage outfits are
quite profitable Real Estate Investment Trusts), they bring—comparative to
their size and infrastructural requirements—few jobs or sales-tax benefits to
towns. They tend not to be particularly aesthetically pleasing, and their
marginal location, as well as the transitory nature of their
"product," has long seemed to attract people doing something they
don't want to be caught doing at home.
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