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by shoo 1922 days ago
Different types of work require specialised equipment and need different kinds of work space.

For a kind of work that's clearly not a great fit for renting out your house: a restaurant. Why exactly might it be a poor fit? Restaurant needs a good location, ideally with enough passing foot traffic of punters who are looking to dine out. The building needs specialised equipment, e.g. commercial kitchen, a place for the customers to dine, a toilet they can use. Interior likely needs to be decorated a bit. There will be various health and safety regulations that the space would need to comply with. In order to attract the custom of bunch of regulars, the restaurant needs to remain in the same place.

Trying to summarise & generalise -- what might be the downsides of renting a working space from someone's home?

* some specific kinds of workplaces are subject to additional regulation. getting the regulation may require making improvements/changes to the house and wrangling with bureaucracy

* probably not a good fit for businesses that need to attract lots of passing walk-in customers, or need a workplace that presents a veneer of a professionalism to build credibility when meeting customers

* probably not a good fit for businesses that need longer-term lease arrangements, or the _option_ of longer term lease arrangements

* probably not a good fit for businesses that need specialised equipment that needs to be lugged about

* probably not good fit for businesses that need to make physical changes to their workspace

What would the advantages be to the potential renter, compared to alternatives of longer-term commercial leases with more ability to customise workplace, or shorter-term more flexible leases in shared spaces dedicated to working? (e.g. co-working spaces that also rent access to photocopiers/reception/fancy address/meeting rooms; co-working hacker/maker spaces that also rent time-share access to expensive tools & machinery like cnc machines; ...)

1 comments

So I think this would be for knowledge intensive workers, who can currently work from home if they want.

For businesses with big property and equipment costs I agree - you can't operate from a different location.

Luckily, the biggest and newest businesses are not machinery heavy (haven't seen anyone touch the photocopier in a while). Footfall etc are less of an issue - this only applies to the retail sector and frankly a smaller and smaller part of it!