mattress sales sf

mattress sales sf

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Mattress Sales Sf

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) is an award-winning sleep startup that launched with an outrageously comfortable mattress sold directly to consumers — eliminating commission ­driven, inflated prices. The critically­ acclaimed sleep surface was developed in-house by a team of product engineers with experience from IDEO, has a sleek design, and is delivered right to your door in a small, “how did they do that?” sized box.Casper is one of the fastest growing consumer brands of all time, launching in April 2014 and earning $1M in revenue in its first 28 days. The company quickly struck a chord with consumers in a category that has stagnated for decades. In February 2015, it announced sales exceeding $20M in its first ten months. The company raised a $55M Series B investment led by IVP, bringing its total funding to $69.95M. Talent Acquisition Manager- SF Name Your Dream JobAbout this itemImportant Made in USA Origin Disclaimer:About this itemImportant Made in USA Origin Disclaimer:Sleep more comfortably at night with a convenient Slumber 1-8'' Mattress in a Box (Multiple Sizes).




It is ready to use on platform beds and easy to set up for standard beds. The Slumber 1 Mattress in a Box features a firm and tightly wound top bed mattress with integrated individual spring coils that provide a customized feel that conforms to the shape of your body. The springs are spaced close enough to provide optimal support, yet far enough apart to increase motion separation and provide more undisturbed rest. The tight top mattress also features breakthrough rebound technology, meaning that the mattress is tightly packed when shipped to conserve space and naturally expands in just a few hours. Other bedding accessories, like foundations and bed frames, are available separately. Each Slumber 1-8'' Mattress in a Box (Multiple Sizes) comes complete with a 10-year limited warranty. Slumber 1-8" Mattress in a Box, Multiples Sizes: Tight top bed mattress with individual spring coils Revolutionary rebound technology lets the Mattress in a Box expand when unpacked Increased motion separation: springs provide undistributed rest Slumber 1 spring mattress is constructed to adjust individually to your weight and body shape Heavier gauge steel coil for durability and comfort with the Slumber 1 Mattress in a Box Mattress is tightly packed and vacuum sealed




, please allow 72 hours to return to original shape Twin dimensions: 75" x 39" x 8" Full dimensions: 75" x 54" x 8" Queen dimensions: 80" x 60" x 8" King dimensions: 80" x 76" x 8" Also available: Smart Base Steel Bed frame in Twin/Full and Queen/King Beds sold separately; see our assortment of beds Bed frames sold separately; see our assortment of bed frames Great for platform beds; requires foundation or box spring with standard bed frames Foundations sold separately; see our assortment of foundations Slumber 1 Mattress in a Box includes a 10-year limited warranty Directions: Fabric Care Instructions: Blot dry;Spot clean with mild detergent;Wipe with clean clothSpecificationsGenderThicknessTypeModelFinishBrandRecommended RoomMattress ThicknessRecommended LocationConditionMaterialFirmnessColorFeaturesAssembled Product Dimensions (L x W x H)Take an interactive tourVideoswill this mattress packing fit into my 2001 model corolla?by It looks like you are not signed in. To proceed you will need to either sign in or create a new accountSign Inwill this mattress packing fit into my 2001 model corolla?by It looks like you are not signed in.




To proceed you will need to either sign in or create a new accountSign InIt says "in a box" what actually does that mean? Would it need to be on a plywood surface? Or could it sit on 2 x 2 propsby It looks like you are not signed in. To proceed you will need to either sign in or create a new accountSign Incan the bed be easily put back in the box when not in use?by It looks like you are not signed in. /careplansSee detailsGet a warranty for it here.Gifting plansPricing policyOnline Price Match.ReturnsReturns Policy.Every Saturday and Sunday, Oakland City Councilman Noel Gallo spends hours leading volunteer cleanup crews through his Fruitvale neighborhood, clearing the sidewalks and gutters of discards and debris: battered chairs, car stereos, couches, broken vacuum cleaners, wrecked tricycles, even dead dogs.The volunteers pick up 60 to 80 mattresses dumped on the street each week. That’s just a smattering of the more than 6,000 mattresses left on the streets of Oakland this year, mostly in the city’s poorest neighborhoods.




Bulky and soggy, they’ve come to symbolize blight and decay in a city that’s enjoying a renaissance. As Oakland’s downtown blossoms, its flatlands remain strewn with garbage. “It’s an old-school, neighborhood-type thing — people not waiting for the government to come do it,” Gallo said on a recent Sunday as he rode shotgun in a pickup truck piled high with detritus. He and a volunteer from the Oakland Spanish Seventh-day Adventist Church were ferrying the load to a dump site at the lip of the 880 freeway so the city’s Public Works Department could pick it up Monday. Although Oakland residents pay for garbage pickup from Waste Management — which lets them dispose of large items once a year — taxpayers also spend $5.5 million a year for the city to clear bulky junk off the streets. “This is a social problem,” said Kristine Shaff, spokeswoman for the Oakland Public Works Department, noting that residents of other cities routinely dump their trash in Oakland.




Mattresses alone have become a major blight because many people would rather chuck them on the street or by the freeway exit than pay a fee to recycle them. By November, the Public Works Department had cleared 6,572 mattresses left out to rot — down slightly from last year’s 6,852, according to staff reports. Oakland’s biggest mattress dumping hot spot is its deep east corridor, from 82nd Avenue to the city limit, an area that also suffers from poverty and crime. Public Works has addressed the problem for years with bus shelter ads and mailers to encourage good behavior. In January, Alameda County set up a pilot program that pays people $6 to $12 to bring discarded mattresses to an East Oakland recycling facility. In February, Oakland began offering rewards to people who report illegal dumping — up to half of the fines collected if the report prompts a citation. Such fines can run up to $1,000 a day until the debris is picked up. Although these programs have barely reduced the number of mattresses on the street, Shaff said she hopes to see better results next year because the state is expanding its Used Mattress Recovery and Recycling Act of 2013.




Sponsored by state Sen. Loni Hancock, D-Berkeley, the act requires retailers to tack an $11 surcharge onto every mattress they sell to help fund a statewide recycling program. In January, the state will open new collection centers that pay $3 for every mattress they receive. But it might take more than a state law to solve the problem. Oakland, like many other cities, has pockets of highly concentrated poverty. It’s those areas that become magnets for garbage, said UC Berkeley Law Professor John Powell, who directs the Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society at UC Berkeley. “There’s a sense of certain neighborhoods literally and figuratively being dumping grounds,” Powell said, pointing out that more garbage piles up in East Oakland, where there are more abandoned buildings and empty lots than in other parts of the city, and where many residents don’t have cars to haul their old mattresses away. Gallo, in contrast, sees blight as a matter of personal responsibility.

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