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🧮 Correction: US indie coworking numbers
CoworkingCafe demonstrated grace as stewards and crunchers of coworking data, by letting us know Expand 👇 that: "Following publication, we received updated source data and identified a discrepancy in the dataset used for the original analysis. We’ve since refreshed the report using the latest available data, resulting in updated city rankings".
Here are the updated figures: St. Paul and Wichita ranked first among US cities for independent coworking presence, with independent operators accounting for 80% of the local coworking market. Jacksonville came in third with 75% independent operators. Followed by Tucson, Baltimore and Las Vegas, each with independent operator shares above 70%. Midwest markets claimed eight of the top 15 cities.
🗞 Week 23, 2026
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📈 Data
⏱ 2 days ago.
🇩🇰 Danish operator nearly 5x profit
Ordnung, a Copenhagen-based flexible workspace operator, has nearly fivefold its net profit since Expand 👇 2021 (from €260K to €1.3M) while also doubling revenue to €18.2M, reports Coworking Europe, showing it can grow without sacrificing margins.
In 2025 alone, operating profit jumped 34% and operating margins improved from 7.2% to 10.2%, signaling tighter cost control as the business scales. Looking ahead, Ordnung plans to open one new Copenhagen CBD location per year and is targeting a long-term EBITDA margin of 20%.
🗞 Week 23, 2026
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📈 Data
⏱ 2 days ago.
🗽 Midtown office rents are splitting up
Avison Young data shows that Midtown Manhattan’s top office corridors are no longer rising together. Expand 👇 Hudson Yards and the Plaza District are now the fastest-growing corridors at 6.4% and 7.4% annual rent growth since 2022, while Penn District has cooled to around 2%.
If you’re looking at Midtown office space, the Plaza District and Park Avenue remain the priciest and most resilient, driven by finance and legal tenants who aren’t going anywhere.
🗞 Week 23, 2026
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⏱ 2 days ago.
🇺🇸 Where indie coworking are gaining ground in the US…
The latest CoworkingCafe analysis looks at where independent coworking operators are gaining their Expand 👇 strongest foothold across the U.S.
The study analyzed 73 U.S. cities with populations above 200,000 and ranked them by the share of coworking operators that are independently owned (defined as companies with less than four coworking spaces within a single city).
While larger brands still account for nearly 60% of the coworking markets analyzed, the report shows that locally owned operators are carving out a strong presence in cities where remote-work demand, manageable business costs and active entrepreneurial communities create room for independent flex spaces to grow. Main findings below.
St. Paul, MN, ranks #1 for independent coworking. Indie operators make up 80% of the city’s coworking market, with eight of its 10 providers locally owned. St. Paul also has a strong remote-work base, with more than 20% of local workers teleworking, compared to the national average of 13.3%.
At #2, Wichita, KS, where indie operators represent 67% of the coworking market, with eight local providers among the city’s 12 coworking businesses. Baltimore, MD, has the largest independent coworking market among the top 15. Ranking third overall, Baltimore counts 21 independent coworking operators, representing 62% of its local market. Nearly 18% of its workforce is working remotely.
Density wise, St. Petersburg, FL, has more than four independent operators per 100,000 residents, the highest concentration. It also has the highest remote-work rate among the top performers, at 21%, while its self-employment rate of 6.2% exceeds the national benchmark of 5.9%.
The Midwest stands out as the strongest region for indie coworking. Seven of the top 15 cities are in the Midwest.
🗞 Week 22, 2026
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📈 Data
⏱ 8 days ago.
🇬🇧 London demand for flex up 40%
Billy Hodges and Holly Bailey shared CBRE’s London Flex Market Update report for Q1 2026 that shows Expand 👇 tenant demand is up sharply, with flex requirements rising 40%, and 43% of transactions coming from TMT (tech, media, and telecom) clients, mostly AI-driven companies looking for smaller, agile spaces near major transport hubs.
Prime flex office rates are up roughly 10% across core submarkets, with operators like Runway East and Industrious expanding into high-quality West End locations, while landlords like Yoo Capital are increasingly partnering with flex operators rather than leasing to traditional tenants. CBRE expects 2026 to be a record year for flex transactions, driven by a tight development pipeline, fast-growing AI companies, and a maturing flex market that now supports longer-term occupier commitments.
🗞 Week 22, 2026
🔗 Direct Link
📈 Data
⏱ 8 days ago.

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