Search by city, by duration, by the kind of work you have to do. Or scroll — the rooms are arranged the way a well-stocked bookshop arranges its shelves: with care, and a slight bias toward the ones we love most.
Mariana's painting studio above the 28E tram line. West-facing, three flights up, every eleven minutes a tram. The best afternoon light in Alfama.
Diego's drafting table, two blocks from Plaza Río de Janeiro. He'll be elsewhere. The wifi password is on a Post-it under the lamp.
Kostas built it for his daughter, who has moved to Berlin. Kettle, lemon tree window, and a strict rule against phone calls.
Up two flights smelling faintly of starch. Long table, three north windows, sewing machines below. The cat is named Khun Maew.
Tunde's ad-agency office, yours every Friday. Six seats, a door-sized whiteboard, and a generator that hums politely from 11 to 4.
Two desks in Filipa's front parlor, facing the famous cedar tree. She works from the back. Tea at four, if you let her.
A 180m² photo studio in a converted wine warehouse. Three north skylights, a freight elevator, and a couch nobody can remember moving in.
Eight foot by eleven. One window, north-facing. Tea at eleven on a tray, without a word. Hamish the cat upstairs.
Above a kebab shop in Karaköy. The window faces Galata. Selin works mornings; afternoons are yours. She'll lend you her dictionary.
Two armchairs and a long oak table in João's apartment above a second-hand bookshop. River views. Cat. Strict no-pitching policy.
A private library, three thousand volumes, opens its members reading room to FlexSlice guests two days a week. Silence is enforced.
A single desk in the window of a tailor's shop on Rua da Junqueira. Senhor Almeida has been sewing waistcoats since 1971. Warm starch.
Quiet rooms. Mostly homes. Hosts who will leave you alone for six hours and bring you tea on the seventh. Best for: writers stuck on a chapter, founders writing a memo they've been avoiding, anyone with a deadline that has begun to hurt.
Browse 84 rooms →Sound-tested rooms with good wifi and at least one door that closes properly. Often above businesses that close during the working day. Best for: sales calls, interviews, recording podcasts in private without a studio.
Browse 62 rooms →Larger spaces — warehouses, studios, parlors with two tables — for 3 to 12 people. Whiteboards, kettles, fast internet, and a kitchen you can use without an apology. Best for: offsites, sprints, workshops, the occasional birthday.
Browse 38 rooms →Rooms with a view. Often higher than the city around them. Best for: deciding whether to take the job, deciding whether to leave the job, deciding whether the company is worth saving. Bring a notebook. No screens after 3pm.
Browse 41 rooms →Studios proper. Concrete floors, big windows, a sink and a service door. For photographers, set-builders, ceramicists, tailors, podcasters, painters, anyone whose work has weight. Day rates are higher; the rooms are larger.
Browse 47 rooms →Rooms that open at six. Bakeries below, often. Hosts who don't mind a key in a pot and a guest before they themselves are up. Best for: coastal-time-zone meetings, the four-hour morning rule, anyone who writes best before the world wakes.
Browse 29 rooms →We've scouted 384 rooms ourselves and added every one by hand. If your city isn't on the map yet, or the kind of room you want isn't in our list, write to us. We answer everyone, eventually. Often we know somebody.
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