Co-working spaces for moms
Common spaces are growing in gig economy
Work and Play’s perks include on-site child care.
Dani Geraci opted out of full-time work at an advertising agency after her first child was born. When her second child was 10 months old, Geraci decided it was time to put her business skills back to use in some way.
That’s when she decided to try out Work and Play, a shared work space near her home.
Geraci, a Maplewood, New Jersey, resident, described the neighborhood co-working space in South Orange as a “magical place” that helped her launch her branding and marketing business.
Geraci said she knew the alone time would benefit her work and enable her to figure out her business plan, but she hadn’t anticipated how much she would enjoy the collegiality of being in an office setting.
“I had missed having that environment where you sit down, have a cup of coffee, chitchat for five or 10 minutes before getting down to business,” she said. “That is a huge part of who I am.”
For those chasing work-life balance, particularly working moms, flexible work schedules are an alternative to fully leaning in or entirely opting out.
Co-working spaces, which offer uninterrupted time away from the distractions of home, are the perfect solution for flex moms. Some, like Work and Play, offer perks specifically targeted at moms, including on-site child care. Women make up more than 75 percent of the membership, most of whom are mothers in flexible work arrangements.
“Because I didn’t know what I was doing, I just wanted a space that I could use to think for a couple of hours without any distractions,” said Geraci.
“I could drop my son off at preschool and drop my baby off at childcare at Work and Play and walk upstairs and just focus on me for the first time in a couple of years. At least for a couple of hours at a time.”
From 2005 to 2015, the percentage of women who were employed in an alternative work arrangement or “gig economy” (which includes freelancers, contract workers and on-call workers) more than doubled, rising from 8.3 percent to 17 percent, according to a Harvard University study.
The study also found that women were now more likely than men to be employed in the remote or on-demand economy. Little wonder that womenonly co-working spaces are sprouting all over the country.
At HudCo, 80 percent of the membership is women.
On a recent tour of the newly opened 9,000-square-foot space in a former brewery in a warehouse overlooking the Hudson River in Dobbs Ferry, New York, Christina Cohen, an interior designer and co-founder, said she wanted the aesthetics to resonate with women without being “pink.”
The result? An Instagrammer’s fantasy.
Light streams through tall, leaded windows in the converted warehouse space with high ceilings and concrete floors. A large, marble check-in counter mimics a bar, complete with bronze foot railings. Blonde wood tables, fabric couches imported from Italy, statement lighting fixtures, area rugs and a kitchen with custom cabinetry and a dining table that can double as a ping-pong table after-hours lends to a clubby vibe. Oh, and the facility also includes a wellness space.
Cohen said a brainstorming session during a weekend “momference” in Maine with fellow Dobbs moms and HudCo co-founders Christy Knell and Katherine Bagby – all New York City transplants who moved into the village around 2012 to raise their families – led the three women to pursue the idea.
Knell, a graphic designer who previously worked for Martha Stewart Living and Wired, and Bagby, a physical therapist, had been working out of a much smaller space in the same building as HudCo – the renovated warehouse had previously housed a brewery and a bible printing factory.
“We had been running a sort of tester, bootstrapped version that was just our own shared office space,” said Knell of their initial venture, known as the Hudson Collective.
“And we wanted to build on the interest and knowledge from that experience.”
In two years, membership grew to 30 members. At HudCo, which requires a three-month minimum membership, the least expensive option is $99 per month for four visits.
The number of co-working spaces in the U.S. in 2019, projected to be 5,026, is nearly double the amount offered in 2015, according to Statista, a provider of market and consumer data.
“If you’re home, there’s always something to do other than work,” said Bagby. “Your kids or dogs or laundry will need your attention.”
The popularity of co-working spaces is not just about having a distractionfree workplace.
An increase in the number of remote and independent gig economy workers was cited as one of the main reasons for the growing “loneliness epidemic,” by Vivek Murthy, the former Surgeon General of the United States.
The camaraderie of colleagues
In 2012, two years after her second daughter was born, Deborah Engel, who grew up in New City and now lives in South Orange, New Jersey, left her job as a public relations professional in New York City to pursue freelance work from home. Engel said she grew lonely “hiding” in her small home office and missed the camaraderie of colleagues. That’s when she began exploring the idea of co-working spaces.
“Even if you’re a freelancer, you’re not sitting in your apartment alone, you actually can go and work with others,” said Engel.
In 2015, weeks before her third child was born, Engel purchased an 1800s fixer-upper in South Orange, New Jersey, in which she established Work and Play. A year later, she obtained a license to run a day care out of the gray clapboard house. Visitors enter through an orange door into a brightly lit space with work stations and long tables.
The lower floor houses the child care center.
Work and Play lets parents build their own schedules. Children can attend for as little as two hours per week to as many as 30 hours per week. Excluding childcare, Work and Play charges range from a $25 day rate to unlimited weekday hours for $275.
“I just wanted a space that I could use to think for a couple of hours without any distractions.” Dani Geraci