CommonGrounds plans to build 2 million square feet of flexible
office space in two years with the Series A funding, one of the
largest capital-raising rounds for a commercial real estate
venture at such a stage, the San Diego-based firm said.
A build-out of about 50 sites would vault CommonGrounds, which
has three locations in California and one in Denver, into a
select grouping of U.S. coworking firms. The company declined to
say what its valuation was after the fundraising.
Still, it would lag WeWork with its more than $10 billion in
backing from Japan's SoftBank Group Corp <9984.T>.
WeWork raised just $17 million in its Series A funding in early
2012 and did not top $100 million in a single round until late
2013, according to website Crunchbase.
Workspaces with movable office walls have been the Holy Grail in
office construction. They boost the flexibility that shared work
space operators tout, allowing shorter-term leases, immediate
occupancy and minimal planning by management.
However, these systems have not been cost effective and have
been plagued by poor quality, lousy acoustics and difficulty in
wiring the walls with electricity, said Dan Doyon of Workplace
Hospitality Management, a San Francisco coworking consultancy.
"If you can get the price right and solve all the fundamental
issues, it obviously makes a ton of sense," he said.
CommonGrounds recently reconfigured about 11,000 square foot of
workspace used by 130 people in 14 days for $40,000 using a
system designed and manufactured by Tecno Spa of Milan, Italy,
said Chief Executive Jacob Bates of CommonGrounds.
"Without this building technology it would have taken a minimum
90 days and hundreds of thousands of dollars," he told Reuters,
highlighting the "hackable" environment of its workspace, a
phrase it plans to trademark.
CommonGrounds has entered an exclusive contract for the flexible
space industry with Tecno Spa, he said.
Investors in the fundraising were Mohamed Alabbar, chairman of
Emaar Properties <EMAR.DU> in the United Arab Emirates; Bob
Davidson, an early developer of educational software and
Pacifica Enterprises Inc, which also provided the seed money.
Landlords have sought to partner with coworking firms as it can
be 50 percent more profitable than leasing directly to a
company, Green Street Advisors said.
U.S. flexible workspace has grown 23 percent annually since
2010, JLL research shows.
(Reporting by Herbert Lash; Editing by Himani Sarkar)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|