Company Culture
Business development / Coworking

WeWork ventures into a coworking desert with its ninth DC space

WeWork plans to open its first location outside of the Northwest quadrant of the city in summer 2017. It'll be near the Navy Yard metro.

WeWork will offer a more flexible membership for $45 per month. (Photo courtesy of WeWork)

WeWork, the New York-born chain of coworking spaces, announced last week that the company has chosen a location for its ninth space in D.C. — 80 M Street SE near the Navy Yard metro. The new space will be WeWork’s first outside of Northwest Washington, D.C. (or the NoVA suburbs).


In his comments as keynote speaker at the Washington, DC Economic Partnership Annual Meeting on Nov. 18, WeWork President and CFO Artie Minson announced the space, saying that is represents WeWork’s continued investment in the District, regardless of the uncertainty surrounding the incoming presidential administration.
D.C. is WeWork’s second largest market, Minson said at the meeting.
The Navy Yard location will be 68,673 square feet spread over the first three floors on 80 M Street near Nationals Park and is slated to open in summer 2017.
Thus far, the vast majority of D.C.’s coworking spaces have been clustered in the Northwest quadrant of the city, as you can see in this WDCEP map of over 70 such spaces. That is slowly changing, though, what with this new WeWork space and Brooklyn-born coworking company The Yard’s D.C. debut near Eastern Market, also coming in 2017.

Companies: WeWork / Washington, DC Economic Partnership
Engagement

Join the conversation!

Find news, events, jobs and people who share your interests on Technical.ly's open community Slack

Trending

DC daily roundup: DMV innovation's movers and shakers; DDOT's social media troll; facial recognition tech at DCA and BWI

DC daily roundup: An athletic tech acquisition; a reflection on summer 2020's equity promises; data center taxes

DC daily roundup: Auxa Health's seed raise and Nasdaq shoutout; the $500M Tech Hubs race; TikTok ban's impact on the marginalized

Edtech CEO looks back on the promises of summer 2020: 'It never rang true to me'

Technically Media