Newsletter The Manchester Upset, The Original Meaning of Coworking, and Taking the Armour Off The Greens just upset Manchester because locals rebelled against top-down control. Bernard DeKoven saw this coming in 1999 when he coined “coworking” as a verb—working together as equals.
Newsletter You had work to do, but you did the washing The pattern, the irony, and what we do when the systems are failing.
The Glass Box is a lie. Here's what actually works. See how Kofi, Williamz, Karen and Tom are building Social Capital—and why we're bringing operators, activists, and makers together on Feb 24th.
The Neighbourhood Is the Only Thing Resisting On acting locally, building wealth fortresses, and why February 24th is the conversation we've been avoiding.
Newsletter When You're Alone, Your Goals Feel Impossible What years of micro community taught me about finding your voice — and why our February 24th event isn’t a coworking conference.
How the First Bernie Invented Coworking Why the original meaning of "coworking" is exactly what you need right now.
All Year, We've Been Talking About What Citizens Do. This Week, We Find Out If We Meant It. On the difference between posting about community and showing up for it.
Do You Have Coworking Space Imposter Syndrome? Why the things you feel insecure about are actually your greatest assets—and the research that proves it.
The Antidote to Alienation Is Participation How the market economy prevents neighbouring - and what community infrastructure looks like instead
What the F*ck is Coworking On yuppification, performative inclusion, and why the person calling out your jargon might be right I was once on an online call with eight people. We were discussing the future of work and coworking in a very ethnically diverse London borough. I pointed out that we were six white men and two white women discussing the socio-economic future of a group of people whose voices weren’t in the room. The call went very quiet. No one said anything for about a minute, and then they just started tal