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Entries in office space (4)

Wednesday
Sep262012

The Perks of Creative Play

Jeff Wirth, President of the Wirth Creative, is an expert on developing interactive story experiences for simulation, research, and entertainment. He has consulted for Cirque du Soleil, Blue Man Group, and Disney Imagineering. His latest project is Whispers in the Dark,in which a non-actor participant becomes the lead character in a story that plays out over 24 hours in various settings in New York City. 

What was your inspiration behind Whispers in the Dark?

For the past 30 years I have been creating interactive story experiences in which non-actors become the central character in a story in which they have no idea what is going to happen. When I was invited by Matt Bolish at the Film Society of Lincoln Center to create an experience for the Convergence Weekend of the New York Film Festival, it seemed like the perfect opportunity to introduce this work to New York City. 

What do participants usually get from being involved with interactive story experiences?

There is a great power in being given permission to play fictionally.  Children play by nature, but as adults, we often become constrained by our perceptions of who we are and who we are supposed to be.  When participants play in an interactive story, they discover the potential that lies within them, outside the realm of their everyday lives.  They discover new power and realize new potential through the process of fictional play.

What’s your favorite story from loosecubing?

When we were scouting locations for Whispers in the Dark, we were looking for a cool office space.  As a Loosecubes member, I contacted Kevin Swett, who connected me with Marissa Feinberg, the owner of Green Spaces which is a Loosecubes host location.  When I met with her, I discovered that Marissa is not only a creative business owner, but also a talented actress, so we wound up casting her in a role in the project.  You never know whom you’re going to connect with when you’re ‘cubing! 

If you’re in NYC, you won’t want to miss Whispers in the Dark at the New York Film Festival on Sunday, Sept. 30 at 2 PM. 

SPECIAL THANK YOU TO LOOSECUBES for connecting the dots here! - Marissa, Green Spaces

Monday
Jul232012

Startup Tech Companies with Revolutionary Idea

There are a lot of startups being built today and many of those have ideas that aren’t found in any companies before. A lot of these also rely heavily on technologies to get things done and if you are interested in knowing some of them, you better read on because we have quite a few startup tech companies with revolutionary ideas.

Green Spaces 

If you live in New York or Denver or are planning to set up an office in any of these locations, then consider checking out Green Spaces for your needs. This is because one of the aims of Green Space is to provide coworking office space for social technopreneurs. The good thing about Green Space is its environment itself. You will be surrounded with a community of people who are willing to do networking and work together with you. Read more: Green Spaces: Entrepreneurial Space in NY & Colorado

Monday
Apr232012

How To Be Creative # 01: Surround Yourself With Good Company

We’re all about promoting creativity – it’s what we live to do and that’s why we’re launching a new series on what we know will help you make awesome. It’s in your reach, but like anything sometimes you just need a little nudge. Inertia’s a bitch like that.

Being creative is about sharing ideas. So much so that I’d say any of us are only as creative as the company we keep. By sharing ideas we’re clued in on the minds of others from different places and backgrounds, which I believe makes us that more likely to foster great ideas. It doesn’t have to be mind blowing like time travel or inventing the electric blanket mobile. Sometimes being creative is simply taking an idea one step further or applying a concept differently like T-post did with t-shirt magazine subscriptions.

Co-working is a great way to surround yourself with a diverse group of people. We do it here and learn so much from participating. It’s blown up on a worldwide scale, but you don’t really even have to be that organized. Who do you know in your life that has a really cool job or interesting side project? Strike up a conversation, take them to coffee or lunch and get them talking about their passion. You’ll be surprised how much hearing the excitement in their voice will motivate you.

Ready to take action? Be sure to check out:
Jelly
The HIVE
Green Spaces
Benefits of Co-working

Friday
Feb032012

Goodbye home office, hello co-working

Independent professional, 27, seeking OS for short- or long-term commitment. Politics progressive; Chinese takeout a fave. You: accommodating, not too clingy; quiet but social. Groups OK. Let’s get together and change the world.

So might read the personal ad of a typical young freelancer of the postindustrial, postrecession workforce. She’s not looking for a mate—she needs office space, a “co-working” venue, to be precise.

Whether the term co-working will mean anything to you has everything to do with your age, your occupation and where you live. In big cities, a certain segment of 20- to 40-something professionals (mostly male techies) have already been co-working—that is, sharing communal office space—for more than a decade. Typically they come together under the high ceilings of renovated warehouse buildings; they work alone, but together.

In recent years, co-working has been catching on among a wider range of professional types, including virtual business owners of every sort, designers and writers, and off-site employees of large companies. Renting a desk by the month, or even by the day, these free agents can avoid both the loneliness of working at home and the soul-raking aggravation that comes with table-surfing at Starbucks. A two- or three-person company can use co-working to establish a base without ever signing a commercial real estate contract.

Not surprisingly, a handful of businesses have opened in the last two or three years to connect space seekers with empty desks. Of these, the current category front-runner is Loosecubes, a Brooklyn, New York-based online directory and booking service created by a 33-year-old former investment banker named Campbell McKellar. Loosecubes is the most human-friendly online service that office managers can use to list empty desks; it’s far less anonymous than Craigslist, and it allows members to search, book and pay for reservations directly on the site.

McKellar launched the Loosecubes alpha site in June, 2010, at the time listing 20 locations. Within four months, that number had jumped to 600. There are now 3,000 office spaces at 1,500 locations in the company database, covering more than 500 cities in 67 countries. Toronto is the fifth most-searched city on the site—and the only Canadian city in the top 10—trailing larger centres like New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles but leading Berlin.

For the first year, McKellar and her small group concentrated on building the network—“This is about introducing people to people, not people to space,” she says—and offered all services for free. In September, 2011, the company began charging hosts a 10% transaction fee for every booking, though there’s no cost for membership. Users sign on via Facebook, a key component of the site’s social grid; create a Loosecubes profile; and look for their next office by postal code, social connections, professional alignment and user ratings. A desk can cost between $50 and $350 per month, depending on office amenities and location.

In short order, McKellar has become a visible champion of the new-to-the-mainstream movement, says Marissa Feinberg, founder of Green Spaces, a co-working site in New York’s SoHo district. Like McKellar, Feinberg believes that the movement’s success relies on its ability to foster communities, and so the members of her office loft, a popular Loosecubes pick, hold an “ideas bounce lunch” over steamed veggie dumplings every Wednesday. In a given week, one’s tablemate could be an industrial designer from Spain; the maker of an online encyclo–pedia for kids; or the fellow who’s introducing the world’s first fair-trade vodka, made from quinoa, to the U.S. market.

Several signs point to such co-working sites becoming a larger, more permanent and, paradoxically, more free-flowing feature of what we know as work. With fewer traditional openings on the market, and job security scarce, more people are willing to strike out on their own with a business idea or accept project work, especially if they can share the costs of office resources. Ever-improving mobile and cloud computing technology continues to make fixed addresses less relevant. At the same time, more businesses are having their employees work remotely either part-time or full-time, while the ranks of the self-employed (some 2.6 million in Canada, as of November, 2011) continue to grow.

Those happy professionals already on the co-working path say there’s no comparing the perks against those of a corporate office gig. Commutes are history. Colleagues are interesting, talented people you might never meet otherwise, and there is no corner office. Web designer Michael Cairns, who recently used Loosecubes to book an office in Brooklyn from his home in Australia, summed it up best: “Sure, sometimes you have to work all hours. But today I’m sending a few e-mails, and then I’m going to the museum.”

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What co-working space is right for you?

By far the most nurturing of co-working situations is a start-up incubator, where companies on similar tech-focused missions share space, mentoring resources and company equity with their landlords: namely, venture capital investors. Getting in requires connections and a successful application.

If that’s not your game, you might instead join a co-working collective like The Hub, which has branches in 30 cities on five continents. Anyone can rent space at a Hub and gain instant access to a “family of other Hubs,” and experts in every field, says Joanne Macrae of The Hub Halifax, the only one in Canada. At the San Francisco and London locations, Hub leaders have begun experimenting with on-site venture capital consulting, and VC infusions (called Hub Venture Labs) raised by the local outlet itself. Casual introductions to angel investors in Halifax are already part of Macrae’s mission, as are free events like tech talks on specific topics—how non-profits can use Twitter, for example—arranged by devoted members.

A third model is even less structured—it might involve a small company with rentable space and a willingness to host a rotating cast of one or two freelancers either for fun, or to help cover the rent, or both. Still rare in this category are people like Chuck Lin, who runs a web and app development company called Urban Pixels out of his one-bedroom apartment in New York’s Lower East Side. His six employees are scattered across the U.S., however, so Lin works alone. He’s using Loosecubes to invite people to work with him at his kitchen table.

“It’s a social experiment for me,” says the 39-year-old. “It’s been nice to have people here. Even if I don’t talk to them, it gives a different feel, a little life.”

The most he’s ever charged someone? Ten cents per day.