When I first started Creative Density in Denver I rented out a 3500 sf 
space, but only really wanted 2000 sf after a hard lesson learned when 
helping out a space in Toronto that had 7500 sf and no members. In Toronto 
people would join but spread way out because they could. New members 
naturally wanted to give everyone enough space so they rarely naturally had 
a conversation or get to know each other unless I, as a community manager 
played an active role, which I did. It reminded that space design needed to 
play a more active role in creating the culture I envisioned.

Advice (for what's it worth): Force Density
This lesson reminded me about how Daniel Pink and Richard Florida described 
how the close proximity of people in cities spurred innovation and 
conversations. After all, this is what coworking is trying to do on a micro 
level (hence the name Creative Density). I was inspired by this idea and 
would use the 3500 sf I signed a lease for in a different way.

First, when the space opened I only made around 1500 sf. available to the 
members by furnishing a limited segment of the space and closing doors. 
This allowed the space to have different rooms for different work styles 
(quiet room, lounge, energy, and open floor desks) but people were forced 
to be close enough to each other that they would they would have 
conversations more frequently and get to know each other. This had 
a dramatic positive effect on creating community compared to my experience 
in Toronto. As the membership grew I slowly opened the doors up, furnished 
rooms, and included them in the tour. At 40 members, we still have a large 
600ish sf room that is not being used very regularly so I have plenty of 
room to grow into.

Second, I lived in 3 of the rooms taking up a quater of the building for 
the first 11 months of operations. This is more of me being lean since the 
place was zoned accordingly and knowing Creative Density didn't need 3500 
sf at launch. It worked out well but I couldn't allow Creative Density to 
be a 24/7 space.

Overall, it's okay as a new space owner to not furnish and open the entire 
space for use at first, and can actually damage your culture that you are 
trying to create. Don't be afraid to block some spots off and limit your 
space to encourage conversations and community.

Craig
Creative Density
Denver





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