"we are working with a commercial real estate broker/architect to plan out the 
most efficient use of the space"

Word of warning: unless these folks have coworking experience, you're very 
likely to get...undesireable results. Its not that their expertise is wrong 
it's that they have lots of defaults based on workspaces designed by employers, 
for employees. This doesn't translate well to coworking and community 
experiences, and I've spent a lot of time helping people "undo" these defaults.

Efficiency is part of the equation, but I would argue that it's not the goal. 
Experience is the goal. What are people going to see and feel when they walk in 
the door? What will they see from each seat? What is line of sight? What isn't? 
How will sound travel? Where will foot traffic be high? Where will it be low?

A couple of common mistakes I see made in the name of efficiency:

- work benches/desks facing the wall. Good for space use, terrible for member 
experience.
- not enough areas where people can sit without a walkway behind them (again, 
good for space use, bad for member experience)
- narrow hallways with offices on both sides (I like to call this "the cruise 
ship"

Regardless of who you work with in the professional capacity... the BIG 
opportunity is to involve the community in the design process. This could be as 
simple as sharing potential floorplan and asking people where they think things 
might go? Keep in mind, the goal here isn't to do everything they say/want, 
it's to use your questions to spark discussion where you can listen and 
synthesize and help them feel invested in the project.

As for 6k vs 10k sq fr, I can say with confidence (I've run Indy Hall at 2k, 
4k, 8k, 10k, and 14k sq ft variants) that generally speaking, anything you can 
do in 10k sq ft you can do in 6k.

For getting started, I Would personally choose a 6k option that has options to 
expand in the future. 10k sq ft that starts or mostly empty isnt a great 
experience for your founding members, unless you are sure you can make it feel 
populated every day.

Occupancy is massively variable by your community and membership structure, 
location, even seasonality. Even how people define "occupancy"! Ive seen such 
wide ranging answers to this question I could not imagine trying to project 
this on averages. It's another reason I encourage people to start smaller with 
options to grow.

In terms of choosing a space itself, I would be much more concerned with the 
layout of however many square feet, how much flexibility you have in different 
ways to lay it out, the amount of natural light, ease of access to get into the 
space, nearby amenmities (restaurants, cafes, etc) and most importantly how 
your community can be involved in making it their own along the way :)


On Aug 2, 2017, 10:23 PM -0400, da...@donelsoncommons.com, wrote:
> Greetings all!
> My wife and I are in the final planning phases of starting our new coworking 
> venture in Nashville Tn. We have several in town currently, but not anywhere 
> on our side of town. So far the initial response from the community as a 
> whole has been all positive. We are working on the financial projections, 
> size of space needed (our first building was put under contract prior to us 
> being able to move forward)
>
> The questions I'm having trouble finding answers to are
>
> What is the average size of a coworking space vs how many memberships offered 
> in that location.
> What is the average vacancy factor in a coworking space. I know this number 
> will most likely be geographically specific, but we are working with a 
> commercial real estate broker/architect to plan out the most efficient use of 
> the space at hand so "close enough" should do. WE don't want to lock in on 
> 10000 square feet if we can offer the same experience to our members with 6000
>
> Thanks for your help in advance
>
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