The Standard (St. Catharines)

Sorry, power-lunchers, these tables are reserved for drop-in workers

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SAN FRANCISCO — The bar at the Elite Cafe here was packed, but not a drink was being poured.

The champagne stand sat empty and warm. The tap was covered in plastic wrap. Instead, the restaurant was flooded with the low din of typing. That’s because the Elite Cafe, from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. every weekday, is not exactly a restaurant anymore and certainly not a bar. It is a co-working space.

Everything is now a co-working space, one of those shared offices that are popular among freelancer­s, small companies and other workers who want a change of scenery. Coffee shops are co-working spaces. Gyms are co-working spaces. Social clubs are co-working spaces. And now restaurant­s — but only before dinnertime.

The company that laid the extension cords and power strips across Elite Cafe’s copper tables is called Spacious. Since it was started two years ago, Spacious has converted 25 upscale restaurant­s in New York and San Francisco into weekday work spaces.

Membership, which allows entry into any location, is $99 a month for a year, or $129 by the month. With $9 million in venture capital it received in May, Spacious plans to expand this year to up to 100 spaces.

A restaurant makes for the perfect conversion, the Spacious team argues. Bars become standing desks. Booths become conference rooms. The lighting tends to be nicer, less harsh and fluorescen­t, than an office, and the music makes for a nice ambience.

Originally, the founders of Spacious thought they would have to sell restaurate­urs on the idea.

Instead, restaurant­s, struggling to pay rent and wages and frustrated with disappoint­ing lunch traffic, are coming to them, eager to strike deals for a slice of the membership dues.

Only 5 per cent have made the cut to become Spacious spaces, said the company, which is unprofitab­le.

Spacious is part of a broader debate over how to use spaces in cities as people increasing­ly buy items online instead of in stores and as labour costs make restaurant­s an even more challengin­g propositio­n.

A membership model is the future for bricks-and-mortar spots, according to the Spacious team, and restaurant­s are the easiest first step.

“Actively consuming isn’t what we want to do with the space in our neighbourh­oods anymore,” said Chris Smothers, 30, a Spacious co-founder and its chief technology officer.

“Retail spaces are designed for you to come in, make a transactio­n and get out, and that’s why you feel weird in a coffee shop all day, because all of these spaces are designed for you to leave.”

The zoning implicatio­ns of what Spacious is doing are unclear. Can a restaurant just become an office during the day?

“Somebody would have to make the case that we are an office — and I think that’s a pretty heavy burden of proof,” said Preston Pesek, 39, a co-founder and the chief executive of Spacious, who previously worked in commercial real estate investing.

“What really is the definition of an office? A business conversati­on can happen anywhere. A phone is a computer.”

He is hoping some linguistic adjustment­s help.

“We’re trying not to use the word ‘co-working’ because of some of the zoning issues,” Pesek said. “We prefer the term ‘drop-in work space’.”

Andrew Rudansky, a spokespers­on for New York City’s Department of Buildings, said the use of restaurant­s as co-working spaces was permitted as long as the businesses primarily operated as restaurant­s.

The department would investigat­e any complaints that they were no longer mainly eating and drinking establishm­ents, he said. San Francisco’s Planning Department did not return requests for comment.

The first Spacious, in 2016, was the hip bistro DBGB Kitchen and Bar in New York, which closed last year. The restaurant’s management had set the tables for dinner each night before closing, and all day the tables had sat fully ready.

Members of the Spacious team asked to be trained in how to lay the tables — they would do it themselves after their co-working clients were done.

“We set 180 place settings a day,” Smothers said.

Spacious’ founding team originally met in New York through a shared interest in yoga.

“I’m into raja yoga, and Preston’s into ashtanga, and a friend said, ‘You guys are both into real estate,’” Smothers said.

They met their chief operating officer, Jaclyn Pascocello, who was a general manager at the Hillstone Restaurant Group, after she heard about the project through mutual friends while on a yoga retreat in Puerto Rico.

Their first plan was to use hotel rooms while the occupants were out for the day. They designed convertibl­e furniture to hide the hotel bed and made plans for a concept building.

Then they realized there was a simpler space to manage: restaurant­s.

Pascocello, 30, argues that the trick to making a better co-working space is to run it as if it were a restaurant. “We take guest notes,” she said. “The goal is to know everyone’s name, know what they’re working on, know if they’re sensitive to noise, how they like coffee, the milk options.”

Restaurate­urs said that as many of their colleagues faced financial struggles, there was less stigma around sharing their space.

They give Spacious a set of keys, and the startup opens it in the morning, brews coffee and has its own staff host at the door.

On a recent afternoon, Smothers and Pascocello visited Crave Fishbar in Midtown East, which is a Spacious space during the day. Crave’s host that day was Dave Wilson, 25, who was a bartender before managing this brood of pop-up office workers.

“They’re more low maintenanc­e,” he said of his new customers.

Around 4 p.m., restaurant staff arrive to set up the dining room. A text goes out announcing last call for coffee and that the power cords are being pulled up.

There’s no branding aside from a sandwich board on the sidewalk. One-third of the members join Spacious after just wandering by one.

The founders want the space to look like the restaurant and for no two spaces to have anything in common except one thing:

“The coffee is always to the left of the water,” Pascocello said. “If you walk in and it’s to the right, we’ve failed.”

 ?? SAM HODGSON NYT ?? Chris Smothers, center, and Preston Pesek, right, co-founders of Spacious, alongside the company's COO, Jaclyn Pascocello, at Crave Fishbar in New York, June 29, 2018. Spacious, a membership-based startup, converts upscale restaurant­s into weekday...
SAM HODGSON NYT Chris Smothers, center, and Preston Pesek, right, co-founders of Spacious, alongside the company's COO, Jaclyn Pascocello, at Crave Fishbar in New York, June 29, 2018. Spacious, a membership-based startup, converts upscale restaurant­s into weekday...

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