This is really, really sad news. I only visited workspace for the first time
in this past year, but it's always been an inspiration from a space
design/utilization standpoint for me. I met with Dane while I was there in
February, and have the utmost respect for him, his approach, and his
involvement over the years.
I can echo that we've continued to grow despite (or thanks to) the
recession. Great things are happening for many of our members, and we seem
to be coming out of a slight summer "lull" of activity and our office has
been teaming with people for the last 2 weeks.

We, and transitively, the entire scene, has seen a rejuvenation underway for
the fall. Barcamp planning is underway. New event ideas are springing up
every day. Peoples' businesses are taking off. Things are *good* right now.

Now, the hard discussion. I hope nobody thinks that I'm crass in bringing
this up so quickly, but I kept quiet after the last significant space
closing hoping that someone else would bring up these issues, and they were
not approached. This is where things get hard for coworking. Bad things will
happen. My heart hopes that no bad things happen to anyone that any of us
know, but it's inevitable, and healthy.

My thesis is that in order for coworking to be truly mainstream, it needs to
fulfill both successes and failures. Like, massive successes.
And colossal fuck ups. Coworking will *never* find its way into business
textbooks until both sides of the scale have been tipped. We need case
studies from both ends of the spectrum to study the longevity of this
business concept, this movement, and this way of life.

What strikes me as a valuable lesson with the Workspace closing comes from
the e-mail they sent to their members:

http://www.techvibes.com/blog/vancouvers-workspace-to-close-doors-this-week

The new owner mentions that they took on workspace's pre-existing debt as a
public service, and I have to imagine that even making it just past break
even while sustaining any amount of debt is bad for the spirits of the
management team, which trickles down to the membership.

This reinforces why we believe so strongly in bootstrapping. *Spend money
like you don't have any.* One of my favorite lessons/stories from Geoff is
how he runs his businesses as if there was a recession all the time, so when
there actually is a recession, it's business as usual.

*Taking on debt as a public service is a bad move. *You're not helping
anyone in the long run. There's an immense value in remaining introspective
and purposeful with your coworking space. There is no value in a space
that's packed full of amenities, but accrues more debt than members.

Furthermore, I think it's interesting that Workspace kept the problem from
its' members. I won't speculate why because that's unproductive, but it
certainly makes me think how I would approach things if we were in hot water
for any amount of time.

In recent months we've seen the fall of two longstanding coworking spaces:
Cubespace, and now Workspace. Both were large spaces, with significant
communities that called them home over a long period of time. Cubespace let
their community know that there was a problem, but only after it seemed too
late. The community's response was positive and supportive, but wouldn't
support as more than a band-aide. Workspace shocked its members with an
abrupt notice. Ripping of the band-aide, to continue the metaphor.

I'm frankly not sure which I prefer, and while I hope that I'm never in the
position to make the hard decision that those space owners made, I hope we
can all learn from the things they've done during their time open.

I hope that we can have this discussion out in the open, candidly and
intelligently, and all turn this disappointing news into something we all
can reflect on.

-Alex

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Alex Hillman
im always developing something
digital: [email protected]
helpful: www.unstick.me
visual: www.dangerouslyawesome.com
local: www.indyhall.org



On Thu, Aug 20, 2009 at 6:39 PM, Chad <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> We're finding the "recession" has only heightened the need for low
> cost office solutions.  The biggest need is promotion and education.
> Once the single worker understands the opportunities to start over
> outside their home they will come.  We're just getting going and
> hoping to also tap into the City's initiative to invest in  the
> creative class.`  Loking forward to hosting a JELLY this month and a
> grand opening in the Fall along with a artist install.  We're starting
> small - creating the need and then grow with the ever increasing demand.
>
> Chad
> www.thecreativespace.ca
> Barrie Ontario, Canada
>
>
> On 20-Aug-09, at 6:20 PM, Sasha V wrote:
>
> >
> > I'm very saddened by the news that Workspace, an early adopter of
> > coworking, is closing its doors this week. Their blog gives some
> > explanation on the situation before the new owner took the place over
> > last year and what happened with the recession since then.
> >
> > Any thoughts out there? Any positive "screw the economy" news out
> > there??
> >
> > Sasha Vasilyuk
> > Sandbox Suites
> > www.sandboxsuites.com
> > @SandboxSuites
> > >
>
>
> >
>

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