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Multifamily Laundry Options Today’s State-of-the-Art Laundry Rooms

Multifamily Laundry Options

Ask people to list the household chores they dislike most, and chances are, doing laundry will consistently rank among the top ten. The need and appreciation for clean clothes gets overshadowed by the inconvenience of constantly having to wash and dry them.

So, when it comes to laundry, “people want flexibility,” says John Sellier, the regional director of sales for Mac-Gray Laundry Services, which is headquartered in Waltham, Massachusetts, but provides services nationwide. “They want the convenience of being able to do their laundry when they want, how they want.”

Through a merger in 2014, Coinmach and Mac-Gray together now own more than half the market share of condos and HOAs in the country. CSC ServiceWorks, the parent company, owns a family of nationwide businesses, including Coinmach Corp., Mac-Gray, ASI Campus Laundry Solutions, Sparkle Solutions Corp., Appliance Warehouse of America, AIR-Serv, AirValet, Service Directions Inc. and Super Laundry.

A Necessary Amenity

That's why more and more newly constructed buildings are providing laundry units inside units. “If they can vent them, it works,” says Seth Breitman, vice president of SEBCO Laundry Systems in Raritan. “If they can't vent them, they sometimes put them in anyway, but imagine if you put a wet towel in a dryer, and it doesn't have a vent. That water needs to go somewhere.”

While it’s true that new construction touts space for individual laundry amenities, community laundry facilities still are still the norm in older community associations, as well as newer community associations, which have been converted from apartment buildings where the plumbing will not allow for in-unit machines. Gone, however, are the days of dim and dingy laundry rooms located in a basement that no one really wanted to visit.

“Years ago, I’d walk into a laundry room and it would be dark and had probably 10-year-old paint. They were dungeons,” says Mark Eisler, vice president of sales for Hercules Corp. in Hicksville, New York. “Today, they’re well-lighted, have nice-looking equipment, tile floors, new lighting. They’re really an amenity. It’s a whole different beast. When associations came into play, people really started to take an interest in the building. They wanted the laundry room to look as nice as the lobby. It’s a quality-of-life issue.”

Associations have to deal with assessments and a seemingly endless number of costs that go into keeping the community running. Many laundry services provide a break from that by having residents pay each time they use the laundry machines. “In our industry, it's unique,” says Breitman. “When you have an exterminator come to your building, you pay the exterminator. When you have a window guy come or an elevator guy come or a roof guy come, or a landscaper, you pay them. With the laundry guy, I'm going to come and bring the laundry equipment, install it, I'm going to give you 24-hour service, and I'm going to pay you. So, it's a unique proposition for an owner.”

Forget the Quarters

In fact, community laundry as we know it has changed dramatically for residents of many multifamily association buildings. Some these days are going really high-tech, with laundry rooms that do everything except put your clothes in the machine and fold them when they’re done.

For example, you won’t see residents lugging bags or cans of quarters along with their clothes as they head to the laundry room today. “We’re using debit and credit cards,” says Daniel Scharfman of ACES Laundry Service in Hartsdale, New York. “It really makes life easier. People are used to using their cards, they like it, and it’s simple.” Each machine, he explains, has a card reader. Users can simply swipe their credit or debit card just as they do with any other purchase.

“Quarters,” Eisler agrees, “are history. It’s like a black-and-white television.” In the “old days” of coin-op machines, he says, “there were so many service calls because of jammed coin slides and people trying to use different currencies, or 'slugs,' to beat the system.” His company uses coded value cards that customers can load from their debit or credit cards—and then use themselves, or give, along with the code, to someone else who might be doing the laundry for them.

Also gone are the days of making multiple trips down to the laundry room—or hovering over an occupied machine—waiting to pounce the moment it becomes available. Many laundry companies now offer remote monitoring systems that eliminate the need to jockey for machines. Hercules developed a “Smart Center” system that allows residents to see if machines are available—from the comfort of their living rooms. “You can go on the website to see if a machine is in use or available, so you don’t have to schlep your clothes down to the laundry room, only to be disappointed,” says company project manager Adam May. “You can receive a text or an email when a machine becomes available. And if you have clothes in a machine, you can be notified when they’re done.”

Faster communication options have improved service times, too, so that customers aren’t left without laundry facilities at peak times. ACES posts its service email address next to machines, and prides itself on speedy service. The Hercules Smart Center’s touch screen allows customers to send immediate notification to the company if a machine goes down. “We respond within 24 hours,” says May. “We have seven day a week service on all our washers, dryers and smart card technology.”

Running the Numbers

When it comes to the financial side of community laundry facilities, people hold differing opinions about what “cost effective” means.

“I can often reset the machine from where I am,” says Breitman. “I don't need to send them a check in the mail. I don't need to send them 50 cents or $1.50. I can just reset... I say, 'Take your clothes out of washer number two. Let's leave that one while it drains. Put your clothes in washer number four. I just turned that one on for you.' I can talk to my machines remotely now. That's a very cool feature.”

Scott Scarpato, president of Massachusetts-based Automatic Laundry Services Company Inc., says his company takes a lease interest in the laundry facilities it installs. “We pay rent to the associations with long-term leases where we take care of all the upfront costs, so no money is spent on the part of the community association. Then we’re responsible for maintaining and servicing the machines and collecting the money, which relieves the association of additional costs and duties.”

Barry Heller, the vice president of marketing at Hercules Corp., agrees that most associations “don’t want to be in the laundry business,” although the company is certainly willing to sell the equipment, along with a service contract. Instead, customers generally prefer to have Hercules provide and maintain the equipment, and simply share in the profit.

Green Laundry

Another area of agreement among association managers and vendors is the need for community laundry facilities to be more energy efficient. “Energy efficiency has become paramount for all large manufacturers,” says Sellier. “We now use front-loading washing machines which extract the water at a faster rate, which shortens the dry time, which uses less energy and also makes the whole process move faster for the consumer.”

In 2007, the Department of Energy set standards for regulating energy and water factors for commercial machines, restricting the amount of water in a cycle and how much energy could be used to wash and dry clothes. The result was that community associations received a huge savings to their water, sewer and electrical bills and added a greater environmental benefit to the community.

“They restricted how much water in a cycle and how much energy could be used to wash and dry people’s clothes,” Scarpato says. He added that “community associations received a huge savings to their water, sewer and electrical bills and added a greater environmental benefit to the community” as a result of the new standards.

“We’re very bullish on high-efficiency equipment,” May says. “Years ago, a top-loading 14-pound machine consumed 36 gallons of water. The new high-efficiency machines with a 20-pound capacity—six pounds larger—only consumes 12 gallons of water.” And from the customer’s end, there’s an immediate savings, too, since the high-efficiency units also use less detergent. “We’ve had people report back to us that they had old top-loading machines, and after a year with the new machines, they are wowed by the tremendous water savings,” especially as the cost of water rises, Heller says.

While it might seem like a financial burden at first to bring in energy-efficient technology, that's not the case at all, especially long-term. Many laundry services will even front the cost of including newer machines, which cuts down on their service and repair costs. “There's no reason that anybody should have equipment that is not completely energy-efficient as possible. But unfortunately, a lot of times owners just want to know, 'How much are you going to pay me every month in rent?'” May says, and such a question can cause associations to miss out on the environmental benefits.

For community associations looking to install these more energy-efficient machines, leasing rather than owning allows for a speedier transition. Associations that own their machines are more likely to purchase new machines only when the old ones need to be replaced. That means there could be a mix of old and new equipment in a laundry room.

The other advantage to vendors replacing the machines is that residents are more quickly able to make use of the “bells and whistles” of newer manufactured machines. Gone are the days of simply choosing the size of a load and the temperature of water. As both vendors and association managers explain, now machines provide residents with more choices and flexibility. The type of clothing is separate from water temperature which is, in turn, separate from cycle choices such as a newer “hand wash” cycle. Also, residents have a choice of more dryer settings, including “fluff,” which is equivalent to line-drying clothes, only much faster—and, obviously, indoors.

So, for association residents who have ranked doing laundry as one of their top ten most-hated chores, the good news is that laundry vendors, the Department of Energy, and property developers, owners, managers, and associations are all working together to make that particular chore a little more palatable.

Tom Lisi, editorial assistant, contributed to this article.

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