Houston Chronicle Sunday

Co-working spaces are sprouting up in several far-flung suburban locales

- By Nancy Sarnoff

Co-working spaces have become staples of big-city downtowns. Many are created in converted warehouses or historic buildings near public transporta­tion and other amenities.

But in a city with as much sprawl as Houston, some of the newest co-working spots are cropping up far from the urban core.

Acompany called the Work Lodge is about to open its second location in an office park in The Woodlands. Its first is in the Vintage Park shopping center in northwest Houston.

“Suburbaniz­ation has moved people from the city,” Work Lodge founder Mike Thakur said, noting how retail, medical and other sectors followed the population to the outskirts. “Office space is just another natural progressio­n.”

In the inner city, options for co-working — where entreprene­urs and smallbusin­ess owners share office space in an environmen­t meant to encourage collaborat­ion — also have grown.

The owners of coffeehous­e and bakery Tout Suite have expanded their EaDo operation

with a 10,000-square-foot coworking and retail space called the Co-Op HTX.

New York’s Serendipit­y Labs is bringing its take on the concept to downtown’s Esperson building through a franchise agreement with the building owner.

Serendipit­y’s mission is to upgrade co-working’s laid-back, hipster image by offering space with a more upscale hotel vibe.

Cameron Management, owner of the Esperson, has an exclusive franchise agreement with Serendipit­y for the Houston area, where it hopes to build multiple co-working sites.

Co-working operators typically offer an array of extras.

Level Office, another downtown provider, stocks beer, wine and spirits. A cappuccino machine brews cups in 15 seconds.

The workspaces themselves often have a relaxed atmosphere with couches, oversized chairs and rustic wooden tables.

Ared tunnel slide snakes through the The Work Lodge in Vintage Park.

“You walk into the space, and it’s fun. You just want to hang out there,” said Aaron Howes, corporate managing director for Savills Studley, who advised the Work Lodge on its expansion into The Woodlands.

An open co-working space there is about $250 per month. Tenants receive high-speed fiber-optic internet, a gym membership, coffee, parking, happy hours and business workshops. The price goes up to $600 per month for a private office.

Thakur has experience in the nonprofit sector and once founded a church in Spring. He spent about $1.4 million to build out the 24,000 square feet in Vintage Park. He wouldn’t say what percentage of that space is occupied, but he expects it to be full by February.

The Woodlands location should open in March.

Trevor Hightower is about to open a co-working space in an apartment complex in west Houston, an area that has become the population center of Houston, he said.

“Our thesis is that community, community, community is what drives value in real estate as opposed to location, location, location,” said Hightower, who spent years in the commercial real estate leasing business and is founder of WorkFlouri­sh. “We’re looking at locations we feel like we can pull the community into and create a dynamic ecosystem.”

Houston has a vibrant startup culture, Hightower said. More co-working options, he said, give some of the throngs of energy workers who lost their jobs in recent years a place to hang their profession­al hats.

“I think Houston has a unique scenario because a lot of folks who were thinking about starting a company down the road, that decision was made quicker for them,” he said.

The 11,000-square-foot co-working space is on the first floor of Ascension on the Bayou, south of Memorial along Beltway 8.

Being connected to a multifamil­y complex allows the co-working tenants to share the apartment amenities like the swimming pool and the fitness center. The same goes for the residents, who can access conference space if needed.

Prices range from $200 a month for an open workspace to $1,800 a month for a private suite. nancy.sarnoff@chron.com twitter.com/nsarnoff

 ?? Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ?? The Work Lodge is a co-working space in the northwest part of town. It plans to expand to The Woodlands.
Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle The Work Lodge is a co-working space in the northwest part of town. It plans to expand to The Woodlands.
 ?? Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ?? Work Lodge founder Mike Thakur spent $1.4 million to complete the co-working space in Vintage Park. Tenants get a variety of amenities such as gym membership­s and business workshops.
Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle Work Lodge founder Mike Thakur spent $1.4 million to complete the co-working space in Vintage Park. Tenants get a variety of amenities such as gym membership­s and business workshops.

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