I lived in "rental hell" for the first 20 years of so of my adult life. Most of the time the stoves were gas - largely due to the older nature of construction in the Bay Area and the lack of 220 wiring in many older homes/apartments. I also grew up with gas - none of the flats my family rented in SF were modern enough to have electric stoves. In one case I had a great rental flat in Berkeley; the only downside was an ancient GE coiltop stove. I really didn't like that thing, it had these pushbuttons the size of chicklets on the upper part of the rear backsplash, which were a bit sticky with age/debris, so I was never sure what temp it was really doing. But it worked well enough, I guess. The next place I rented, I made sure it had a gas range. Even though it was a flimsy coppertone Tappan, it was still better than the GE coil top.
When I bought this house, one of the first things I did was to extend the natural gas line to the laundry closet and the cooktop area. I pulled out the '78 GE electric dryer and put a gas WCI in it place. I pulled out the Corning white glass cooktop (which was a bit dangerous - the big burner didn't always shut off) and put in a modern Frigidaire "Gas on Glass" sealed cooktop. I left the electric wall oven (GE P-7) in the main kitchen and the GM Frigidaire Compact 30 electric dropin thick coiltop range in the patio kitchen. I prefer electric for baking, although I think gas broils better.
If the kitchen here hadn't been remodeled in the 70's, it would still fit a full size gas range comfortably. But now that's all turned around, with a fridge and the wall oven where it used to go, and a peninsula on the other side of the kitchen where the cooktop lives. I'd love to get an old 50's Wedgewood or O'Keefe & Merritt into the kitchen, but it would require a lot of demolition to do it ;-). There is nothing quite like an open gas burner... the flame doesn't bloom too big like on a sealed burner. If the range has crumb trays, these make cleanup a lot easier. And the air circulation means that spills don't burn onto the drip trays as readily as with a sealed top.
PS-I saw a 110volt induction hotplate at the local Costco Business Center the other day. All of about $70. Not bad. Good size too, there was a ring the size of a normal large range burner on the unit. About a foot square, I'd say. Induction is the kinder, gentler form of electric cooking
