This actually isn't a joke? I got to the point where it asks for a credit card number, seriously expecting (hoping maybe?) for a "Haha!" message, and yet...
Are there any statistics about this? In my southern Brooklyn neighborhood, which is on the cutting edge of approximately nothing, the laundry rooms in all three apartment buildings I've lived in converted from coin payments to stored-value cards in the mid-2000s.
Before they switched to cards, did they have a coin change machine?
My own building was only built in the 2000s and has a single coin operated machine. It was also fairly cheap. I suspect that many conversions are funded and operated by an outside vendor.
15 comments
[ 4.5 ms ] story [ 36.0 ms ] threadIt's like someone read the New York Magazine Article “Let’s, Like, Demolish Laundry” (http://nymag.com/news/features/laundry-apps-2014-5/) and completely missed the point.
> Grocery and convenience stores aren't always willing to give out more than a few dollars worth of quarters at a time.
Since when did that happen? I live in TO and as long as you buy something from the store, they're always willing to give back change.
I know its not much cash but still... brass balls to run that one.
My own building was only built in the 2000s and has a single coin operated machine. It was also fairly cheap. I suspect that many conversions are funded and operated by an outside vendor.
Idea: arrange for each washing machine to have an email address that you can square cash the money to start it.