{"id":7273,"date":"2016-05-17T14:34:29","date_gmt":"2016-05-17T14:34:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.fabricegrinda.com\/?p=7273"},"modified":"2023-10-17T03:36:50","modified_gmt":"2023-10-17T03:36:50","slug":"my-rematerialized-life","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/grinda.org\/ro\/my-rematerialized-life\/","title":{"rendered":"My Rematerialized  Life"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>In October 2014, at the end of my <a href=\"https:\/\/fabricegrinda.com\/update-on-the-very-big-downgrade\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Update on the Very Big Downgrade<\/a>, I explained that the super high occupancy rates of high end hotels and Airbnbs in New York were forcing me to move location every few days. These high transaction costs defeated the very purpose of the downgrade and pushed me to partially rematerialize.<\/p>\n<p>After an extensive search, I ended up buying an amazing apartment in the Lower East Side in the summer of 2015. It clearly appears antinomic for an avowed minimalist to own such an ostentatious piece of real estate. As such I was approached by <a href=\"http:\/\/bedfordandbowery.com\/author\/kavitha-surana\/\" target=\"blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Kavitha Surana<\/a> from <a href=\"http:\/\/bedfordandbowery.com\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Bed and Bowery<\/a>. She wanted to discuss the seeming incongruousness and cognitive dissonance of my move.<\/p>\n<p>The conversation was lively and fun. I tried to convey that I retain the life lessons from <a href=\"https:\/\/fabricegrinda.com\/the-very-big-downgrade\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">The Very Big Downgrade<\/a> of valuing experiences, friends and family infinitely more than material goods. If anything the apartment is now a vector to further those experiences and relationships. I can again host visiting friends. I restarted organizing intellectual salons and dinners. Besides in keeping with my minimalism, it remains sparse and I barely own more things than the <a href=\"http:\/\/fabricegrinda.com\/asset-light-living\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">50 items I had previously downsized to<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Kavitha details her impressions in a thoughtful article where she captures the ethos of my downgrade, life lessons and subsequent rematerialization much better than <a href=\"http:\/\/fabricegrinda.com\/some-thoughts-on-the-new-york-times-styles-section-article\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">last summer&#8217;s New York Times article<\/a>. I am transcribing the article below for your reading pleasure. You can find the original at: <a href=\"http:\/\/bedfordandbowery.com\/2016\/05\/meet-fabrice-grinda-the-minimalist-in-the-6-million-les-penthouse\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">http:\/\/bedfordandbowery.com\/2016\/05\/meet-fabrice-grinda-the-minimalist-in-the-6-million-les-penthouse\/<\/a><\/p>\n<h3>WHO LIVES THERE?<\/h3>\n<h4>Meet Fabrice Grinda, the Minimalist in the $6 Million LES Penthouse<\/h4>\n<p><a><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\" wp-image-7274 alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/www.fabricegrinda.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/Grinda1-600x400.jpg\" alt=\"Grinda1\" width=\"888\" height=\"592\"><br \/>\n<em>(Photo by Kavitha Surana)<\/em><\/a><br \/>\nAs he rang in 2015, Fabrice Grinda, a 41-year-old tech entrepreneur from France, took stock of his life. He\u2019d been living out of suitcases for the past four years, globetrotting and swinging between upscale hotels and top-notch Airbnbs. He decided it was time to \u201cpartially re-materialize.\u201d Not settle down with a white picket fence (horrors!) \u2014 nothing drastic \u2014 but simply find a simple New York landing pad he could call his own.<\/p>\n<p>You may have read about Grinda\u2019s \u201c<a href=\"http:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2015\/06\/14\/fashion\/a-curious-midlife-crisis-for-a-tech-entrepreneur.html?_r=0\" target=\"blank\" rel=\"noopener\">curious midlife crisis<\/a>\u201d in The New York Times this past summer. A successful internet entrepreneur and angel investor (Alibaba, Lending Club and Delivery Hero are some of his early investments) he reached incredible financial heights, with a 20-acre estate complete with personal butler, an extra $13,000-per-month rental in Manhattan, and a sleek McLaren sports car, only to eventually feel bogged down by \u201cthe trappings of success.\u201d So, never one to do things half-assed, he took the new conventional wisdom of valuing experiences and relationships over material possessions to an extreme most millionaires would never contemplate: He sold his home, donated his clothes, and even got rid of the McLaren. His net worth still skews north of $100 million, but he has pared his personal items down to the bare necessities.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-7286\" src=\"http:\/\/www.fabricegrinda.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/2-600x475.jpg\" alt=\"2\" width=\"888\" height=\"704\"><br \/>\n<em>(Photo by Kavitha Surana)<\/em><br \/>\n\u201cBecause I really downsized my life down to 50 items, it freed up a lot of time that people usually spend A, in a sort of location and B, dealing with admin stuff and paying bills, to focus on more essential things,\u201d he said, padding around his new 3,000-square-foot Lower East Side penthouse, barefoot in jeans and a crisp white button down. Speaking at a relentless elevator-pitch clip, he\u2019s constantly laying out options, examples or test cases in a logical, easily digestible list. Grinda\u2019s personal website is also meticulously detailed\u2013his exhaustive \u201cabout me\u201d page lists his age, height, weight, educational history, favorite movies, TV shows, books, and personal interests (which include: his dogs, tennis, debating, theater and, natch, <em>The Economist<\/em>).<\/p>\n<p>Grinda says limiting his personal possessions was a revelation, giving him more time to concentrate on all the things he loves. \u201cYou know, like friends, family, experiences, traveling the world and doing fun things,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd for the first few years it really worked.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>But being a nomad eventually had its downsides too, especially in a city as popular as New York, Grinda\u2019s frequent home base for work and play. He began his new peripatetic lifestyle in the tailspin recession of 2008, but as the economy began to pick up, occupancy rates in hotels and apartments also spiked, causing frequent headaches. For one, he couldn\u2019t stay in the same room at one of his favorite hotels, like the Mercer or the NoMad, for weeks at a time on a last-minute trip, or book a high-end Airbnb for more than a few consecutive nights.<\/p>\n<p>Then there were the increasingly common awkward conversations: \u201cYou can imagine how it looks from a dating perspective. Like, every time you\u2019re in a different hotel room,\u201d Grinda said. \u201cThe girl is like, wait a minute, is it because your wife and your kids are at home? And I\u2019m like, no, I live in hotels!\u201d<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-7288\" src=\"http:\/\/www.fabricegrinda.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/3-600x398.jpg\" alt=\"3\" width=\"888\" height=\"590\"> <em>(Photo by Kavitha Surana)<\/em><br \/>\nSo, at the beginning of last year, Grinda decided he would search for a landing pad in the city, where he could stay in between frequent business trips to San Francisco, visits to his vacation property in the Dominican Republic, and retreats to far-flung locations like Nepal and Machu Picchu. That\u2019s how he ended up on the Lower East Side with a view of the skyline.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI decided I would get a place, not because I am dying to have a place, but really, frankly because I want to decrease these transaction costs of moving around every few days,\u201d he explained. He gestured around at the blank walls of the living room. \u201cSo I still keep a pretty asset-light lifestyle. All the decorations you see here, I bought in one hour for $5,000 on Amazon.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-7289\" src=\"http:\/\/www.fabricegrinda.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/Unique-Downtown-Penthouse-for-sale-11-600x401.jpg\" alt=\"Unique-Downtown-Penthouse-for-sale-11\" width=\"888\" height=\"593\"><br \/>\nHis penthouse is above a Popular community bank on an unassuming block at Houston Street, right at the intersection where Avenue B turns into Clinton. It\u2019s one of the many new high-end developments rubbing shoulders with crowded old tenements and within spitting distance of the <a href=\"http:\/\/bedfordandbowery.com\/2014\/12\/beneath-baruch-houses-a-rough-block-wiped-off-the-map\/\" target=\"blank\" rel=\"noopener\">largest public housing complex<\/a> in Manhattan. Across the street is a Pay-o-Matic money center, the perennial tourist favorite, Clinton Street Baking Co., and the new incarnation of Genesis Party Supply, a Latino bridal and party shop recently priced out of its previous location on Clinton Street.<\/p>\n<p>The apartment itself presents a heady mixture of excess and restraint. The outdoor deck, currently under construction, features a wrap-around deck, a grill and a hot tub. On the day I visited, the marble kitchen counter was littered with the detritus of a busy week \u2014 Pellegrino bottles, half-eaten Seamless orders, a pair of running shoes, Coronas, a champagne glass, a vase of bursting calla lilies, and an empty carton of Laboratorio del Gelato ice cream. The remnants of a fast-paced life where every whim can be easily satisfied.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-7292\" src=\"http:\/\/www.fabricegrinda.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/4-600x425.jpg\" alt=\"4\" width=\"888\" height=\"629\"> <em>(Photo by Kavitha Surana)<\/em><br \/>\nBut open up the row of closets on his second-floor hallway and you\u2019ll find nothing but a crumpled pair of underwear. The walls are also bare, the furnishings in the living room sparse: an L-shaped white couch with a coffee table and cream rug and a small wooden table that can expand, surrounded by unremarkable upholstered white leather chairs. Grinda maintains that his personal possessions still hover around 50, despite his ample digs.<\/p>\n<p>After all, Grinda\u2019s philosophy on life aspires to a new kind of abstinence\u2013call it \u201con-demand asceticism.\u201d It doesn\u2019t mean he can\u2019t enjoy the finer things in life\u2013he just doesn\u2019t own them. Or many of them. (He reminded me that the hot tub on his terrace and a high-end coffee machine came with the apartment.) Otherwise he can easily order up experiences (and luxuries) when he needs them, whether it\u2019s an on-demand massage from Zeel (which he is also an investor of) or dinner from Sprig (another investee). He can catch a ride on Uber (yep, another one) to take him to see Hamilton on Broadway or to a party. Other diverse investments include Palantir, Airbnb, AdoreMe (vertically integrated lingerie brand), GetAround (Airbnb for cars), Reverb (a marketplace for music), and Diapers.com for Germany.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-7293\" src=\"http:\/\/www.fabricegrinda.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/5-600x400.jpg\" alt=\"5\" width=\"888\" height=\"592\"> <em>(Photo by Kavitha Surana)<\/em><br \/>\nBut how did a man who is seemingly spoiled for options end up on the Lower East Side? Grinda described an impressive act of visualization and summoning. Like a 21st century Goldilocks A\/B-testing a new program, he\u2019d tried out many different neighborhoods and types of apartments in New York through Airbnb to find his optimal set-up.<\/p>\n<p>Right off the bat, he deemed the Upper East Side \u201ctoo gentrified.\u201d He tried staying on the Upper West Side, but it didn\u2019t fit his lifestyle (\u201cstroller central\u201d and \u201cbasically Tribeca,\u201d he said). He thought he\u2019d love a townhouse in Brooklyn, but he soon realized there was a fatal flaw. \u201cVertical living is not super convenient,\u201d he explained, with a rueful smile. Instacart deliveries were a pain, forcing him to travel from the fifth floor to the door and back to the kitchen. The un-optimized space got on his nerves. The layout (garden in the back, rooftop on top) threw off the vibe of his parties, dividing the mingling.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-7294\" src=\"http:\/\/www.fabricegrinda.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/Corner-Terrace-600x402.jpg\" alt=\"Corner-Terrace\" width=\"888\" height=\"595\"> <em>Roof terrace before construction<\/em><br \/>\nA couple months into 2015 he landed on his ideal digs: a penthouse with floor-to-ceiling windows that opened directly onto a wraparound roof deck for seamless entertaining at his famous parties and \u201csalon\u201d evening. So far, the apartment only existed in his head, but that didn\u2019t discourage Grinda. He began to wrack Zillow and StreetEasy until, sure enough, he found a a three-bedroom place IRL that fit his description. It was already occupied, but he made an offer and bought it for more than $6 million.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-7296\" src=\"http:\/\/www.fabricegrinda.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/Terrace-at-Night-1-600x401.jpg\" alt=\"Terrace-at-Night\" width=\"888\" height=\"594\"> <em>Roof terrace before construction<\/em><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-7298\" src=\"http:\/\/www.fabricegrinda.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/Unique-Downtown-Penthouse-for-sale-3-1-600x401.jpg\" alt=\"Unique-Downtown-Penthouse-for-sale-3\" width=\"888\" height=\"593\"><br \/>\n<em>Roof terrace before construction<\/em><br \/>\nPrice was not necessarily an object for Grinda, but he has a few thoughts for potential buyers. First off, \u201ccrazy arbitrage\u201d makes the East Village much more desirable, financially, than the West. \u201cWhy would the cost per square feet, when you\u2019re buying, be so much lower here than the West Village, which is seven minutes away by Uber?\u201d he said. \u201cUltimately you are going to have convergence pricing here within Manhattan for sure, so it makes more sense to buy\u2013 to the extent you are doing it with economic logic, which I wasn\u2019t, to be honest, but to the extent you are\u2013 it makes more sense to buy in the LES where you are paying way less on a square-foot basis.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>He says he\u2019s enjoying exploring his new Lower East Side home, when he is in town\u2013 \u201cit\u2019s funner, it\u2019s grittier, it\u2019s younger. The best bars, the best restaurants are all here,\u201d he said. I asked about his favorite spots and he pulled out an iPad. \u201cI\u2019m still new to the neighborhood,\u201d he said. \u201cThis is where Yelp comes in handy.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Since buying his penthouse, he has become frustrated with all the regulations he has to deal with, a drag on the fast-moving paces he\u2019s used to in the on-demand world. \u201cMy recent experiences with construction and regulation both in the US and the Dominican Republic definitely highlight the differences between the unregulated, fun and fast-growing world of bits, and the regulated, painful and slow, world of atoms,\u201d he wrote on his blog at the start of 2016.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-7299\" src=\"http:\/\/www.fabricegrinda.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2016\/05\/6-600x400.jpg\" alt=\"6\" width=\"888\" height=\"592\"> <em>Grinda looking at the terrace under construction (Photo by Kavitha Surana)<\/em><br \/>\nBut for someone who appreciates the \u201cgrittier\u201d and \u201cyounger\u201d vibe and scoffs at what he calls \u201cgentrified\u201d Upper East Side, Grinda is not exactly worried about preserving those qualities in his new neighborhood. While Mayor de Blasio and the City Council have just hashed out <a href=\"http:\/\/bedfordandbowery.com\/2016\/04\/why-ev-les-council-members-ended-up-backing-mayors-affordable-housing-plan\/\" target=\"blank\" rel=\"noopener\">rezoning laws<\/a> in which developers will be required to include affordable housing in new buildings and <a href=\"http:\/\/bedfordandbowery.com\/2015\/10\/chinatown-residents-rally-against-racist-towers-they-say-are-displacing-them\/\" target=\"blank\" rel=\"noopener\">protesters<\/a> are fighting against luxury <a href=\"http:\/\/bedfordandbowery.com\/2016\/04\/new-supertall-joining-extell-on-the-waterfront-draws-resident-ire\/\" target=\"blank\" rel=\"noopener\">supertalls<\/a> on the Two Bridges waterfront, Grinda thinks more construction should be encouraged with even fewer regulations, letting all kinds of buildings grow to the sky.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe problem is, the zoning laws are extraordinarily restrictive,\u201d he explained. \u201cThere are things that are completely artificial that, frankly, make no sense. Like air rights, landmarking stuff that doesn\u2019t need to be landmarked, and so it\u2019s much harder to build than it should be. And so as a result, the overall supply of housing in most cities is not growing nearly as fast as demand.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>He swiped through his iPad, showing me before and after photos of Shanghai over a 20-year period. \u201cThis is what New York should be doing,\u201d he said, getting excited. \u201cThat\u2019s liberal zoning laws. You can imagine what happened to the GDP per capita, to the population, etc., of the city, in that period.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Grinda contrasted that with Paris (a walking, breathing museum) where there\u2019s been relatively little new housing stock in the past 50 years. \u201cIt\u2019s created these ghettos where, when you\u2019re out of the city it\u2019s awful, when you\u2019re in the city prices keep on going up, but there\u2019s no economic dynamism,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s like old money and it\u2019s a stale city. It\u2019s beautiful, but stale. I think New York is way more exciting, way more fun.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Though he\u2019s opinionated about such issues, he doesn\u2019t really follow local politics. \u201cI find it so petty and corrupt,\u201d he said. \u201cFor me, home is where I am, and then I create my own life [\u2026] I don\u2019t particularly pay attention to what is going on in the neighborhood.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>At the same time, he can\u2019t imagine a better place to park his suitcase. And he argues encouraging a wave of more construction is actually the best way to keep New York diverse. \u201cI don\u2019t know, it\u2019s like that magical energy in New York. I think it comes from dynamism and economic vitality,\u201d he said. \u201cSocially, artistically, intellectually it\u2019s like the best place to be in the world. And I want it to remain that, so it needs to remain an economic center.\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In October 2014, at the end of my Update on the Very Big Downgrade, I explained that the super high occupancy rates of high end hotels and Airbnbs in New &hellip; <a href=\"\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8222;&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":21058,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"inline_featured_image":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[5,4],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-7273","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-personal-musings","category-interesting-articles"],"acf":[],"contentUpdated":"My Rematerialized  Life. Categories - Personal Musings, Interesting Articles. Date-Posted - 2016-05-17T14:34:29 . In October 2014, at the end of my Update on the Very Big Downgrade, I explained that the super high occupancy rates of high end hotels and Airbnbs in New York were forcing me to move location every few days. These high transaction costs defeated the very purpose of the downgrade and pushed me to partially rematerialize.\n After an extensive search, I ended up buying an amazing apartment in the Lower East Side in the summer of 2015. It clearly appears antinomic for an avowed minimalist to own such an ostentatious piece of real estate. As such I was approached by Kavitha Surana from Bed and Bowery. She wanted to discuss the seeming incongruousness and cognitive dissonance of my move.\n The conversation was lively and fun. I tried to convey that I retain the life lessons from The Very Big Downgrade of valuing experiences, friends and family infinitely more than material goods. If anything the apartment is now a vector to further those experiences and relationships. I can again host visiting friends. I restarted organizing intellectual salons and dinners. Besides in keeping with my minimalism, it remains sparse and I barely own more things than the 50 items I had previously downsized to.\n Kavitha details her impressions in a thoughtful article where she captures the ethos of my downgrade, life lessons and subsequent rematerialization much better than last summer&#8217;s New York Times article. I am transcribing the article below for your reading pleasure. You can find the original at: http:\/\/bedfordandbowery.com\/2016\/05\/meet-fabrice-grinda-the-minimalist-in-the-6-million-les-penthouse\/\n WHO LIVES THERE?\n Meet Fabrice Grinda, the Minimalist in the $6 Million LES Penthouse\n (Photo by Kavitha Surana)\n As he rang in 2015, Fabrice Grinda, a 41-year-old tech entrepreneur from France, took stock of his life. He\u2019d been living out of suitcases for the past four years, globetrotting and swinging between upscale hotels and top-notch Airbnbs. He decided it was time to \u201cpartially re-materialize.\u201d Not settle down with a white picket fence (horrors!) \u2014 nothing drastic \u2014 but simply find a simple New York landing pad he could call his own.\n You may have read about Grinda\u2019s \u201ccurious midlife crisis\u201d in The New York Times this past summer. A successful internet entrepreneur and angel investor (Alibaba, Lending Club and Delivery Hero are some of his early investments) he reached incredible financial heights, with a 20-acre estate complete with personal butler, an extra $13,000-per-month rental in Manhattan, and a sleek McLaren sports car, only to eventually feel bogged down by \u201cthe trappings of success.\u201d So, never one to do things half-assed, he took the new conventional wisdom of valuing experiences and relationships over material possessions to an extreme most millionaires would never contemplate: He sold his home, donated his clothes, and even got rid of the McLaren. His net worth still skews north of $100 million, but he has pared his personal items down to the bare necessities.\n (Photo by Kavitha Surana)\n \u201cBecause I really downsized my life down to 50 items, it freed up a lot of time that people usually spend A, in a sort of location and B, dealing with admin stuff and paying bills, to focus on more essential things,\u201d he said, padding around his new 3,000-square-foot Lower East Side penthouse, barefoot in jeans and a crisp white button down. Speaking at a relentless elevator-pitch clip, he\u2019s constantly laying out options, examples or test cases in a logical, easily digestible list. Grinda\u2019s personal website is also meticulously detailed\u2013his exhaustive \u201cabout me\u201d page lists his age, height, weight, educational history, favorite movies, TV shows, books, and personal interests (which include: his dogs, tennis, debating, theater and, natch, The Economist).\n Grinda says limiting his personal possessions was a revelation, giving him more time to concentrate on all the things he loves. \u201cYou know, like friends, family, experiences, traveling the world and doing fun things,\u201d he said. \u201cAnd for the first few years it really worked.\u201d\n But being a nomad eventually had its downsides too, especially in a city as popular as New York, Grinda\u2019s frequent home base for work and play. He began his new peripatetic lifestyle in the tailspin recession of 2008, but as the economy began to pick up, occupancy rates in hotels and apartments also spiked, causing frequent headaches. For one, he couldn\u2019t stay in the same room at one of his favorite hotels, like the Mercer or the NoMad, for weeks at a time on a last-minute trip, or book a high-end Airbnb for more than a few consecutive nights.\n Then there were the increasingly common awkward conversations: \u201cYou can imagine how it looks from a dating perspective. Like, every time you\u2019re in a different hotel room,\u201d Grinda said. \u201cThe girl is like, wait a minute, is it because your wife and your kids are at home? And I\u2019m like, no, I live in hotels!\u201d\n  (Photo by Kavitha Surana)\n So, at the beginning of last year, Grinda decided he would search for a landing pad in the city, where he could stay in between frequent business trips to San Francisco, visits to his vacation property in the Dominican Republic, and retreats to far-flung locations like Nepal and Machu Picchu. That\u2019s how he ended up on the Lower East Side with a view of the skyline.\n \u201cI decided I would get a place, not because I am dying to have a place, but really, frankly because I want to decrease these transaction costs of moving around every few days,\u201d he explained. He gestured around at the blank walls of the living room. \u201cSo I still keep a pretty asset-light lifestyle. All the decorations you see here, I bought in one hour for $5,000 on Amazon.\u201d\n His penthouse is above a Popular community bank on an unassuming block at Houston Street, right at the intersection where Avenue B turns into Clinton. It\u2019s one of the many new high-end developments rubbing shoulders with crowded old tenements and within spitting distance of the largest public housing complex in Manhattan. Across the street is a Pay-o-Matic money center, the perennial tourist favorite, Clinton Street Baking Co., and the new incarnation of Genesis Party Supply, a Latino bridal and party shop recently priced out of its previous location on Clinton Street.\n The apartment itself presents a heady mixture of excess and restraint. The outdoor deck, currently under construction, features a wrap-around deck, a grill and a hot tub. On the day I visited, the marble kitchen counter was littered with the detritus of a busy week \u2014 Pellegrino bottles, half-eaten Seamless orders, a pair of running shoes, Coronas, a champagne glass, a vase of bursting calla lilies, and an empty carton of Laboratorio del Gelato ice cream. The remnants of a fast-paced life where every whim can be easily satisfied.\n  (Photo by Kavitha Surana)\n But open up the row of closets on his second-floor hallway and you\u2019ll find nothing but a crumpled pair of underwear. The walls are also bare, the furnishings in the living room sparse: an L-shaped white couch with a coffee table and cream rug and a small wooden table that can expand, surrounded by unremarkable upholstered white leather chairs. Grinda maintains that his personal possessions still hover around 50, despite his ample digs.\n After all, Grinda\u2019s philosophy on life aspires to a new kind of abstinence\u2013call it \u201con-demand asceticism.\u201d It doesn\u2019t mean he can\u2019t enjoy the finer things in life\u2013he just doesn\u2019t own them. Or many of them. (He reminded me that the hot tub on his terrace and a high-end coffee machine came with the apartment.) Otherwise he can easily order up experiences (and luxuries) when he needs them, whether it\u2019s an on-demand massage from Zeel (which he is also an investor of) or dinner from Sprig (another investee). He can catch a ride on Uber (yep, another one) to take him to see Hamilton on Broadway or to a party. Other diverse investments include Palantir, Airbnb, AdoreMe (vertically integrated lingerie brand), GetAround (Airbnb for cars), Reverb (a marketplace for music), and Diapers.com for Germany.\n  (Photo by Kavitha Surana)\n But how did a man who is seemingly spoiled for options end up on the Lower East Side? Grinda described an impressive act of visualization and summoning. Like a 21st century Goldilocks A\/B-testing a new program, he\u2019d tried out many different neighborhoods and types of apartments in New York through Airbnb to find his optimal set-up.\n Right off the bat, he deemed the Upper East Side \u201ctoo gentrified.\u201d He tried staying on the Upper West Side, but it didn\u2019t fit his lifestyle (\u201cstroller central\u201d and \u201cbasically Tribeca,\u201d he said). He thought he\u2019d love a townhouse in Brooklyn, but he soon realized there was a fatal flaw. \u201cVertical living is not super convenient,\u201d he explained, with a rueful smile. Instacart deliveries were a pain, forcing him to travel from the fifth floor to the door and back to the kitchen. The un-optimized space got on his nerves. The layout (garden in the back, rooftop on top) threw off the vibe of his parties, dividing the mingling.\n  Roof terrace before construction\n A couple months into 2015 he landed on his ideal digs: a penthouse with floor-to-ceiling windows that opened directly onto a wraparound roof deck for seamless entertaining at his famous parties and \u201csalon\u201d evening. So far, the apartment only existed in his head, but that didn\u2019t discourage Grinda. He began to wrack Zillow and StreetEasy until, sure enough, he found a a three-bedroom place IRL that fit his description. It was already occupied, but he made an offer and bought it for more than $6 million.\n  Roof terrace before construction\n Roof terrace before construction\n Price was not necessarily an object for Grinda, but he has a few thoughts for potential buyers. First off, \u201ccrazy arbitrage\u201d makes the East Village much more desirable, financially, than the West. \u201cWhy would the cost per square feet, when you\u2019re buying, be so much lower here than the West Village, which is seven minutes away by Uber?\u201d he said. \u201cUltimately you are going to have convergence pricing here within Manhattan for sure, so it makes more sense to buy\u2013 to the extent you are doing it with economic logic, which I wasn\u2019t, to be honest, but to the extent you are\u2013 it makes more sense to buy in the LES where you are paying way less on a square-foot basis.\u201d\n He says he\u2019s enjoying exploring his new Lower East Side home, when he is in town\u2013 \u201cit\u2019s funner, it\u2019s grittier, it\u2019s younger. The best bars, the best restaurants are all here,\u201d he said. I asked about his favorite spots and he pulled out an iPad. \u201cI\u2019m still new to the neighborhood,\u201d he said. \u201cThis is where Yelp comes in handy.\u201d\n Since buying his penthouse, he has become frustrated with all the regulations he has to deal with, a drag on the fast-moving paces he\u2019s used to in the on-demand world. \u201cMy recent experiences with construction and regulation both in the US and the Dominican Republic definitely highlight the differences between the unregulated, fun and fast-growing world of bits, and the regulated, painful and slow, world of atoms,\u201d he wrote on his blog at the start of 2016.\n  Grinda looking at the terrace under construction (Photo by Kavitha Surana)\n But for someone who appreciates the \u201cgrittier\u201d and \u201cyounger\u201d vibe and scoffs at what he calls \u201cgentrified\u201d Upper East Side, Grinda is not exactly worried about preserving those qualities in his new neighborhood. While Mayor de Blasio and the City Council have just hashed out rezoning laws in which developers will be required to include affordable housing in new buildings and protesters are fighting against luxury supertalls on the Two Bridges waterfront, Grinda thinks more construction should be encouraged with even fewer regulations, letting all kinds of buildings grow to the sky.\n \u201cThe problem is, the zoning laws are extraordinarily restrictive,\u201d he explained. \u201cThere are things that are completely artificial that, frankly, make no sense. Like air rights, landmarking stuff that doesn\u2019t need to be landmarked, and so it\u2019s much harder to build than it should be. And so as a result, the overall supply of housing in most cities is not growing nearly as fast as demand.\u201d\n He swiped through his iPad, showing me before and after photos of Shanghai over a 20-year period. \u201cThis is what New York should be doing,\u201d he said, getting excited. \u201cThat\u2019s liberal zoning laws. You can imagine what happened to the GDP per capita, to the population, etc., of the city, in that period.\u201d\n Grinda contrasted that with Paris (a walking, breathing museum) where there\u2019s been relatively little new housing stock in the past 50 years. \u201cIt\u2019s created these ghettos where, when you\u2019re out of the city it\u2019s awful, when you\u2019re in the city prices keep on going up, but there\u2019s no economic dynamism,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s like old money and it\u2019s a stale city. It\u2019s beautiful, but stale. I think New York is way more exciting, way more fun.\u201d\n Though he\u2019s opinionated about such issues, he doesn\u2019t really follow local politics. \u201cI find it so petty and corrupt,\u201d he said. \u201cFor me, home is where I am, and then I create my own life [\u2026] I don\u2019t particularly pay attention to what is going on in the neighborhood.\u201d\n At the same time, he can\u2019t imagine a better place to park his suitcase. And he argues encouraging a wave of more construction is actually the best way to keep New York diverse. \u201cI don\u2019t know, it\u2019s like that magical energy in New York. I think it comes from dynamism and economic vitality,\u201d he said. \u201cSocially, artistically, intellectually it\u2019s like the best place to be in the world. And I want it to remain that, so it needs to remain an economic center.\u201d\n ","Category":["Personal Musings","Interesting Articles"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/grinda.org\/ro\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7273","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/grinda.org\/ro\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/grinda.org\/ro\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/grinda.org\/ro\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/grinda.org\/ro\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=7273"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/grinda.org\/ro\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7273\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":21692,"href":"https:\/\/grinda.org\/ro\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7273\/revisions\/21692"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/grinda.org\/ro\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/21058"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/grinda.org\/ro\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=7273"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/grinda.org\/ro\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=7273"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/grinda.org\/ro\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=7273"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}