On the relatively luxurious side of things, development firms in China rent "youth" apartments to students and early-career workers in Shenzen. Here, a student demonstrates a unit with a coveted loft space.
This is demonstration unit, built by the Chinese developer Mofang Apartment in Shenzen, comes with an in-unit washer/dryer.
Students check out a display micro-apartment at the Pearl River Delta Real Estate Fair in Guangzhou, China.
The exteriors of the youth apartments are decorated in ways that appeal to young customers, as this graffiti wall shows.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe living area is still pretty tight, however.
In Shanghai, the story's the same. People need to find creative ways to coexist in tight spaces.
After quitting his job at a stationery store, Wang Cunchun, 93, now shares a 100 square foot Shanghai apartment with his son. He told a Reuters photographer he relies on his pension and a little income from trading stocks as a hobby.
Tech workers often share cramped living spaces, like this one at N-Wei Technology Company Limited in Beijing. Larger firms often rent apartments as dual-use offices and employee dormitories.
In the Chinese city of Hefei, patients who can't afford a bed at the local hospital are forced to receive treatment in one of the 86-square-foot rooms in a nearby apartment building.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdMumbai, India's largest city, faces the same problems as many Chinese cities. In Dharavi — one of Asia's largest slums — multiple families cram into tiny apartments.
The cost of renting a one bedroom apartment in Mumbai averages around $190 per month, which is much more than many residents can afford.
The high cost of living pushed many Mumbai residents into slums like Dharavi, where people pack into haphazardly constructed shanties lacking sewage and running water.
Life, as always, finds a way.
In Hong Kong, skyrocketing property values force some residents to live in cheap "cage apartments." This man told a Reuters photographer he spends $230 a month on a space that consists of little more than a bed and a rice cooker.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe cage homes are stacked on top of each other, giving residents little privacy. Here, a man watches TV in a common area in front of the bed he rents for $167 a month in Hong Kong.
Hong Kong's impoverished citizens live in a parallel universe beside the financial center's glittering skyscrapers and ritzy clubs.
In Seattle, students and young tech employees who want to live in the city's center are forced into tiny units, like this 200-square-foot apartment. "I don't need a bigger apartment," Seungchul You, pictured below, said.
While tiny, these 200-square-foot apartments have everything a single resident may need — except for closet space.
Buildings like this one, which has 55 micro-units, are cropping up all over Seattle's desirable neighborhoods.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdNew York is no stranger to the micro-apartment trend, either. This unit in Midtown Manhattan is 300 square feet and contains telescoping tables and beds that descend from the walls to maximize space and flexibility.
These units, however, are quite a bit more luxurious than their counterparts in Mumbai and Shanghai.