Ask HN: Unconventional places of business to rent a desk?
HN crowd, have you ever sought to rent co-working space at an unconventional place of business, like a car dealership, restaurant, or hair salon?
I am relocating to a new area soon and I prefer not to work in typical co-working hubs like WeWork due to, let's say, bad culture fit. Has anyone had success renting a desk or small office from a business that doesn't normally host programmers? Whom did you rent from, and how did you pull it off?
I'm looking for ideas.
Thanks!
14 comments
[ 3.7 ms ] story [ 41.9 ms ] threadYou can also rent a private office inside those co-working spaces you don't like, so you don't really deal with other people there. If you have a private office inside one of those spaces, I'm not sure why the "culture" would make any difference.
Initially, I thought about treehouse school pods for kids before schools reopened, but the liability is not worth it.
Would this appeal to programmers/etc?
When I left there, I'd met a group of musicians that rented a former paint factory. They'd carved it into different suites and were rented them out, while keeping the main area as a stage they rented. I talked 4 others into joining me, we rented one of the suites, and started our own co-working space. We called it "DropLabs" and it lasted about 5 years, from '06-'11.
I believe a lot of the e-commerce Instagram-centric businesses set up there because the wide roads made deliveries easy. So you get a mix of tech savvy people who also have good fashion sense.
There's a cozy area with a shower and kitchen at the top of the building too, which was meant to be a place for factory workers to live.
If in a small town, the the Borough / local government.
Look up local professional leadership programs. They may also have excess office space.
Really desperate ? Contact some non tenure track professors at the closest university. See if you can rent their office under the table. (This one is slightly tongue in cheek )