That sounds like a good idea to me, though I can't speak from
experience. I'm a consultant and have many clients that have turned
homes into offices. Most provide professional services (small law
firms, accounting, chiropractic, pediatricians, etc..) and their
offices are nice and cozy. The only worry I would have is that most of
these places have pretty independent offices. Each employee is sort of
stuck in their own little room, not in an open environment where the
appeal of coworking is.

I'm sure it can be done and would be very fun. I'd be interested in
joining a coworking group that was established in a house. The
possibilities seem endless.

Justin

On Sep 9, 1:29 am, jason <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hello,
> My Name is Jason and I'm from Minneapolis Minnesota. I have been an
> independent software consultant for 3 years and miss the interaction
> and knowledge share that is associated with being around like minded
> people. I have been interested in coworking ever since I heard about
> it but have no experience. I have a house that is vacant and I don't
> want to sell it because of the current housing situation. So in the
> middle of the night I woke up and thought, 'why not use the house as a
> coworking environment?' Which lead me to this group. I am looking to
> get advice on this processes. Is using a house even a good idea? Have
> others done this?
>
> -Jason Tieszen

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