Cheap and cheerful capsule hotels are forever expanding from their Japanese cradle, including now in Milan where the tiny, stacked rooms are helping the Italian city cope with exploding tourist numbers.
With no-fuss convenience for both the city and transport links, digital connectivity and a social side among their chief selling points, the capsule hotels target the Generation Y crowd.
Some people, though, just stay out of sheer curiosity.
Croatian tourist Dragan Kupresanin, 31, said he wanted to try the room because "it looked like something new, futuristic style... those kind of boxes that you sleep in".
After sleeping like a log at Ostelzzz, down a quiet street in the centre of Italy's economic capital, he's ready for more.
"I really liked it. This kind of hotel should be developed, many people avoid youth hostels because of the privacy problem (with bunk beds etc) but here you have it," he said.
Guests sit in the breakfast area at the new "Ostelzzz" capsule hotel. AFP
Inside the capsule is a mattress with duvet and pillow, two charging plugs for mobile phone or laptop, a lockable cupboard for luggage and a bedside table.
All this for between 19 euros a night ($21), including breakfast, and 150 euros during Milan's world-famous Design Week.
Japanese origin
The first capsule hotels were born in Osaka, Japan in 1979, travel blogger Agnese Sabatini told AFP.
The tiny rooms took off thanks to commuters who had missed the last train home.
Guests walk out the new "Ostelzzz" capsule hotel in Milan. AFP
Since then, the concept has taken off around the world, first in airports, from Paris to Moscow and Bangkok, and then in cities like Singapore, Seoul or Mumbai.
Nevertheless, in Europe, capsule hotels are rare outside of airports.
There is for example the City Hub in Amsterdam and the Lucerne capsule hotel which opened in Switzerland at the end of 2018.
Milan is the first Italian city to have a capsule hotel, but the company behind it, ZZZleepandGo, is expanding.
Capsule hotels will be open at six airports, including Milan and Warsaw, by year's end, with Vienna and four in Brazil to swiftly follow, making it the biggest such company in the world, says chief executive officer Gianmaria Leto.
A guest uses and automated check-in desk. AFP
On top of adding five or six airports a year, "our objective is to create one or two (capsule) hotels a year over the next five years in main European cities," said Leto, 32.
With the ambitious expansion plan, the Italian company said it expects its annual turnover to grow to 10 million euros ($11 million) in five years, compared to one million in 2019.
Claustrophobia?
Sabatini says that "the only negative aspect of a capsule hotel is the feeling of being closed in, of claustrophobia, that some people get."
"Small spaces aren't a problem for young people," she said.
"What they want is technology, like automated check-in, sockets to charge their electronics," but also communal areas to meet new people, she added.
Milan has seen a tourist boom since the city's Expo 2015, thanks to its fashion and design weeks, as well as its Duomo (cathedral), museums and vibrant nightlife.
The city went from 4.2 million visitors in 2011, to 6.8 million in 2018, of which 65 percent were foreigners.
Guest sit a communal arera at the new "Ostelzzz" capsule hotel in Milan. AFP
Last September saw 700,000 visitors, up 18 percent year-on-year, many of them youngsters.
"Four years ago there were just three youth hostels, now there are 26, there's exceptional growth," said ZZZleepandGo chief operating officer Fabio Rocchetti.
The hotel, which can also be booked via the Airbnb website, attracts a varied clientele, and not just visitors to the city.
Some 25 percent are workers or students like Monica Vici, 22, who lives at the Ostelzzz capsule hotel pending finding an apartment.
After or before her classes, she sits at her laptop in the sleek, stylised communal area, while, nearby, people come and go to the hotel's 24-hour bar.
"You have privacy in the bedroom, but there's also a kitchen, you meet lots of people," she said.
The staff, all under 40, are "very attentive", said the Rome native.
Not all guests fall into the millennial category.
The hotel had an 86-year-old guest, and boasts a family room with four inter-connected capsules.
English language teacher Patricia Ann Wells, 48, stays here three nights a week and is equally smitten.
"I like it here because of the friendly environment. It's like being at home," she said.