A public storage facility, also known as self storage or mini storage facility, is a business that rents rooms (or units) to people and allows those people to store items in the room, a kind of shared warehouse.
The rooms are typically windowless, walled with a corrugated metal, and lockable by the renter. Chain-link fencing or wire mesh may function as a more secure ceiling than a suspended ceiling. Rooms are different sized, from one half closets to enough space to store all the contents of multi-story house. A controlled access facility may employ security guards, surveillance cameras and some means of electronic gate access such a keypad, prox card. Some facilities even use biometric thumbprint or hand scanners to ensure that access is granted only to those that rent.
In rural areas most facilities contain multiple single story buildings with units that open to the outside. In suburban areas most facilities contain one or multiple 1-3 story buildings using passenger & freight elevators or a materials lift to move the goods to the upper floors. Ground floor unit access is still direct to the outside. Urban areas self storage facilities are often converted multistory warehouses. Loading docks are used on the ground floor and complimentary rolling carts or moving dollies are used by the customers to access freight elevators that take them to the floor their unit is on. Urban self storage facilities might contain only a few floors in a much larger buildings, There are successful self storage businesses cohabitating with light manufacturing, office tenants and even a public school .
Customers are generally allowed to store any non-hazardous, non-toxic, non-perishable material in the facility: personal items, furniture, motorcycles, overstocked retail wares, etc. Industry surveys indicate that 44% of clients are moving, 34% don't have enough space currently, and 15% of clients are people with business needs. Customers are prohibited from sleeping, or otherwise living in the room.
If the customer fails to pay the rent, a lien is placed on the customers goods and they are sold at auction. The customer is still responsible for any rent and fees due if the auction does not clear their balance.
Less formal public storage might be a locker room, cloak room, left luggage, train stations, amusement parks (especially water parks), and airports. It is of note though that since 9/11, storage in these small kiosks is no longer allowed at American airports, per federal law. There may be an attendant or an automated vending machine to collect the fee and control access, or it may simply require dropping a few coins into a slot to allow a key to be removed locking a compartment. At a swimming pool or sauna the key will be attached to a wrist or ankle strap. This type of storage is typically not related to a self-storage business. Storage such as these are provided as an ancillary service provided as part of another business. Self-storage is a business unto itself.
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"Self storage".
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