Hospitality groups blur the lines between workspace and hotel

Hot-desking hots up as hospitality groups, from Soho House to The Hoxton, open dedicated spaces for the peripatetic creative

As professional life has, for many, been transformed into a precarious portfolio of short-term contracts and side-hustles, so the flocks of peripatetic keyboard-peckers - gathering in cafés, certain hotel lobbies and members' clubs - have grown larger. Even as properly kitted-out co-working spaces have appeared and multiplied (there is now an estimated 521 million sq ft of 'flexible workspace' around the world, valued at around $26bn) many of...

The London-based global members' club chain Soho House has long been a de facto co-working spot. It first created a distinct business for 'digital nomads' in 2015, launching a 16,000 sq ft space below Shoreditch House in east London. In many ways, Soho Works raised the bar on co-working design, with retro phone booths and private offices. There was also a photo studio and post- production facility and even a tooled-up workshop, recognising that not all modern creatives did everything on a laptop. It has also, according to the group's founder and CEO Nick Jones, made money.

Read the full article
Technology Technology

The Hoxton is a series of open-house hotels inspired by the diversity and originality of the streets and scenes that surround them. Just like our doors, our minds are open too. Ever since we opened our first hotel in Shoreditch, way back in 2006, we’ve never just been about offering a bed for the night. We want to be more than that: providing a place where guests can hangout alongside the locals and submerse themselves in the neighbourhood...

Soho House & Co was founded in London, in 1995, as a private members’ club for those in film, media and creative industries.We have since expanded to include Houses across Europe and North America, as well as restaurants, cinemas, spas and hotels.