There appears to be no fridge, barely any cupboards in the kitchen and no pantry other than that tiny corner cutout shelving.
Realistically, even as a single person, you're not going to be doing anything other than the most basic home cooking here because there's no room or amenities for sundries, cans, pots/pans, dishes, leftovers, refrigerated items, counter space, etc.
This setup seems like it would require an open kitchen shelving unit to be placed against the back kitchen wall, further shrink your tiny galley kitchen (not to mention taking up room for a needed bar fridge).
In most countries you have to provide your own fridge. But japanese kitches are indeed extremely small. Apartments are cheap and nice but tiny in comparison to Western ones.
It's absolutely a tight fit, but it is $500 a month. Given that it's in a Japanese city, there's probably plenty of decent places to eat. Also like the Japanese, you will have to get efficient with space and diligent about cleaning.
There appears to be no fridge, barely any cupboards in the kitchen and no pantry other than that tiny corner cutout shelving.
Realistically, even as a single person, you're not going to be doing anything other than the most basic home cooking here because there's no room or amenities for sundries, cans, pots/pans, dishes, leftovers, refrigerated items, counter space, etc.
This setup seems like it would require an open kitchen shelving unit to be placed against the back kitchen wall, further shrink your tiny galley kitchen (not to mention taking up room for a needed bar fridge).
In most countries you have to provide your own fridge. But japanese kitches are indeed extremely small. Apartments are cheap and nice but tiny in comparison to Western ones.
Even in the US it depends on the state. Some states consider refrigerators to be fixtures, others personal property.
Yeah, but I don't see an obvious place to actually put it in.
right of window probably
It's absolutely a tight fit, but it is $500 a month. Given that it's in a Japanese city, there's probably plenty of decent places to eat. Also like the Japanese, you will have to get efficient with space and diligent about cleaning.