From
the New York website: Would
you like to buy a co-working desk with that cable package? Telecommunications
firm Verizon opened its first shared office space at 140 West Street in
Manhattan earlier this year and plans to open similar spaces in Boston,
Washington D.C. and London.
Unlike
WeWork, which has to rent office space from landlords, Verizon actually owns
plenty of office buildings in neighborhoods popular with yuppies. At 140 West
Street, for example, Verizon owns the lower 10 floors (it
sold the top portion to developer Ben Shaoul, who is converting them
into condos).
Does
that mean WeWork has to worry about a serious corporate rival emerging?
Probably not. Verizon — which has been negotiating to acquire Yahoo for $4.8
billion — sees its co-working venture mainly as a neat way to use excess space
and get “engaged in the [tech] community to see what’s going on,” according to
John Vazquez, the firm’s head of real estate. And it isn’t even managing the
space — co-working provider Grind is taking care of that, according to the Wall
Street Journal.
Still,
Verizon’s example shows that major corporations are becoming more comfortable
with the concept of co-working. Firms like KPMG and Microsoft
have bought WeWork memberships for
their employees. Meanwhile, Amazon offers free co-working spaces to
promote its cloud-computing products. Earlier this year, Cadillac opened a
co-working space in the ground floor of its Manhattan headquarters. The space
also includes a coffee shop and art exhibits.
Telecom
firm Sprint opened a tech accelerator in Kansas City. “There are a lot of smart
people who are trying to figure out how to disrupt my industry,” Sprint’s vice
president Kevin McGinnis told the Journal. “I need to be closer to them.” [WSJ] — Konrad Putzier
Original content The
Real Deal
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