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I was listening to Joe Dion's "Come Fly With Me" podcast, and he mentioned
professional pilot's "crash pads" in New York City. And suddenly I'm intrigued. I'm considering taking a job at Google in New York City, but my wife doesn't want to move, so I'm thinking what I need is basic accomodation to crash at 3-4 nights a week while I work 12+ hours a day, then I'll come home to Rochester NY for a long weekend, and a room full of bunk beds, half of them empty, for the nights in NYC sounds ideal. So the question is: can non-pros take advantage of these things, and how do I find one? -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ I didn't need to sabotage anything. Not being around to say "No that won't work" or "you can't do it that way" is more than enough damage. (Ego problem? It's not a problem.) -- Graham Reed, on job endings |
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On Apr 2, 4:39*pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote:
I was listening to Joe Dion's "Come Fly With Me" podcast, and he mentioned professional pilot's "crash pads" in New York City. *And suddenly I'm intrigued. *I'm considering taking a job at Google in New York City, but my wife doesn't want to move, so I'm thinking what I need is basic accomodation to crash at 3-4 nights a week while I work 12+ hours a day, then I'll come home to Rochester NY for a long weekend, and a room full of bunk beds, half of them empty, for the nights in NYC sounds ideal. *So the question is: can non-pros take advantage of these things, and how do I find one? PT, They probably would not want a Non crewmember at a traditional crash pad because you would be there alot more often than anyone else. It might work best if you got your own apartment and rented space to commuters. Years ago there used to be a place called Kue Gardens in New York, that was full of crewmembers. You might check there, Otherwise, if you know any ALPA members there are always acomidations listed on the web boards. If you know anyone who works at an airline they can check the bulletin boards in the pilots or FA's crew lounge. Good Luck, Frank |
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(Paul Tomblin) writes:
I was listening to Joe Dion's "Come Fly With Me" podcast, and he mentioned professional pilot's "crash pads" in New York City. And suddenly I'm intrigued. I'm considering taking a job at Google in New York City, but my wife doesn't want to move, so I'm thinking what I need is basic accomodation to crash at 3-4 nights a week while I work 12+ hours a day, then I'll come home to Rochester NY for a long weekend, and a room full of bunk beds, half of them empty, for the nights in NYC sounds ideal. So the question is: can non-pros take advantage of these things, and how do I find one? I know several folks who work at Google in Mountain View who live in San Francisco or the LA area and have crash pads in Mountain View for weekdays, or live in Mountain View and have crash pads in SF for weekends. It would be worthwhile asking around at work to find people to share a place with. Alternatively, you could ask around at tech companies which are _not_ in NY. For example, I am sure there are folks who work at IBM Yorktown and have crash pads in Manhattan for weekend visits. You could take weekdays, and they could take weekends... Chris |
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F. Baum wrote:
Years ago there used to be a place called Kue Gardens in New York, that was full of crewmembers. It's Kew Gardens. |
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On Apr 2, 6:39*pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote:
I was listening to Joe Dion's "Come Fly With Me" podcast, and he mentioned professional pilot's "crash pads" in New York City. *And suddenly I'm intrigued. *I'm considering taking a job at Google in New York City, but my wife doesn't want to move, so I'm thinking what I need is basic accomodation to crash at 3-4 nights a week while I work 12+ hours a day, then I'll come home to Rochester NY for a long weekend, and a room full of bunk beds, half of them empty, for the nights in NYC sounds ideal. *So the question is: can non-pros take advantage of these things, and how do I find one? -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ I didn't need to sabotage anything. *Not being around to say "No that won't work" or "you can't do it that way" is more than enough damage. (Ego problem? *It's not a problem.) -- Graham Reed, on job endings Me thinks it would be more fun to bunk with the cabin crew vs the cockpit crew, but that's just me. g Wil |
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(Paul Tomblin) wrote in
: I was listening to Joe Dion's "Come Fly With Me" podcast, and he mentioned professional pilot's "crash pads" in New York City. And suddenly I'm intrigued. I'm considering taking a job at Google in New York City, but my wife doesn't want to move, so I'm thinking what I need is basic accomodation to crash at 3-4 nights a week while I work 12+ hours a day, then I'll come home to Rochester NY for a long weekend, and a room full of bunk beds, half of them empty, for the nights in NYC sounds ideal. So the question is: can non-pros take advantage of these things, and how do I find one? We generally stay in hotels. Some FBO's have rest bunks, but probably your best bet if you're talking about weekends in NYC is to check for hotels that do rooms by the week for corporations. They're empty on weekends and very cheap. I took one years ago. It was big, an apartment, really. Fairly handy for seeing the city and it had parking. I think it was in a newspaper. At that time, it was less than 100 for the whole weekend and it slept four in two seperate rooms. Bertie |
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In a previous article, Ron Natalie said:
F. Baum wrote: Years ago there used to be a place called Kue Gardens in New York, that was full of crewmembers. It's Kew Gardens. Or "Crew Gardens" to the flight crews that bunk there. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ Don't you just hate them? Don't you just wanna break their ribs, cut their backs open and pull their lungs out from behind? -- Ina Faye-Lund, on script kiddies |
#8
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"Paul Tomblin" wrote in message
... I was listening to Joe Dion's "Come Fly With Me" podcast, and he mentioned professional pilot's "crash pads" in New York City. And suddenly I'm intrigued. I'm considering taking a job at Google in New York City, but my wife doesn't want to move, so I'm thinking what I need is basic accomodation to crash at 3-4 nights a week while I work 12+ hours a day, then I'll come home to Rochester NY for a long weekend, and a room full of bunk beds, half of them empty, for the nights in NYC sounds ideal. So the question is: can non-pros take advantage of these things, and how do I find one? I've seen that sort of thing listed on CraigsList.org - $xxx for "space" $yyy for your own bedroom near DTW (Detroit), I assume that New York would be similar... Look under rooms/ shared -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
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