cover of episode Co-living is like coworking at home

Co-living is like coworking at home

2025/4/3
logo of podcast Plain English

Plain English

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
J
Jeff
使用ChatGPT来改善关系和解决争论
Topics
@Jeff : 我个人体验过共享居住,它就像工作共享空间的个人生活版,提供灵活的、带家具的共享空间住房,无需长期租赁或购买家具的承诺。这对于临时居住和国际搬迁非常方便。我曾在芝加哥和墨西哥城都体验过共享居住。在墨西哥城,我住在一个大型建筑里,拥有自己的工作室公寓,并享有公共区域,例如合作办公区和屋顶花园,这是一种经济且灵活的选择。在芝加哥,我住在一个共享公寓里,虽然隐私性较差,但位置优越,且能快速入住。总体而言,共享居住满足了我特定和暂时的需求,但它并非长期生活方式。长期来看,我更喜欢拥有自己的私人空间,例如自己的公寓、家具和厨房用具,因为在共享空间里,我无法完全放松,例如在沙发上看电影入睡。共享居住的优势在于其灵活性和便利性,尤其适合那些经常搬家、短期居住或国际搬迁的人群。然而,其缺点在于成本较高,通常比同等条件的无家具公寓贵得多,而且隐私性有限,这对于内向的人来说可能不太舒适。共享居住在2010年代曾一度流行,但最终并未像预期那样普及,因为大多数人最终还是更倾向于拥有自己的私人空间。许多共享居住品牌,例如WeLive、Common和The Collective等,都面临着财务困境或倒闭。目前,共享居住在美国市场上的规模较小,而欧洲市场相对更受欢迎。总的来说,共享居住是一种适合特定人群和特定需求的居住选择,但它并非适合所有人的长期解决方案。

Deep Dive

Chapters
Co-living is a relatively new concept that combines the flexibility of co-working spaces with residential living. It offers furnished rooms or apartments in shared buildings, often with flexible lease terms and a focus on community. This model is compared to co-working, highlighting the similarities in flexible arrangements and shared amenities.
  • Co-living spaces offer furnished rooms or apartments.
  • Leases are often flexible, unlike traditional long-term leases.
  • Shared amenities and community events are common features.
  • The concept is similar to co-working spaces but for residential living.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

You've heard of co-working. Now meet co-living.

Hey there, everyone. It's Jeff, and this is Plain English, where you get to upgrade your English by listening to stories about current events and trending topics. And it's very rare that I make episode topics about myself or my own life. I do it now and then. But today's episode is about something that I have experienced personally. It's called co-living.

I mentioned on previous episodes that I've been spending a few months in Chicago. In fact, this is the last episode I'll record here in Chicago. I lived here for many years, and I still consider it my home in the United States. But I live in Mexico City now. Anyway, I had to come back for a few months, and I needed a place to live.

and I rented a room in a co-living building. Now, if you're not familiar with co-living, well, that's today's episode. This is episode number 763, so the transcripts, translations, exercises, and discussion area are all at plainenglish.com slash 763.

Before we start today's story, I'd just like to remind you that the podcast is just one part of how we can help you upgrade your English skills. At plainenglish.com, you can make faster progress with active learning strategies. You can take quizzes, do activities, listen to the fast version of the audio, and learn

Watch video workshops, practice what you learn, and even join a live call with JR and me. It's all about helping you build your skills to become a better, more confident English speaker. Sound good? Go to plainenglish.com to start your free 14-day trial today. Now, let's jump into today's story.

You may have heard of a new type of office space, co-working. In a co-working office, individuals and small teams rent desks or small offices on a month-to-month basis instead of signing a long-term lease.

The spaces are usually well-designed. Individuals can rent a single desk, while small teams can rent a cluster of desks or offices. They usually include printers, coffee, and Wi-Fi. You might also get access to a receptionist or conference rooms, sometimes for a small extra fee.

There is a social aspect, too. Workers can spend their days around other freelancers, entrepreneurs, and small businesses where, in theory, new ideas can blossom.

The co-working businesses lean into the social aspect. They offer snacks, organize events, and sponsor happy hours, all to build a sense of community. Co-working offers advantages to individuals and small companies. A typical office lease requires a long-term commitment, usually five years or more.

But co-working lets you pay by the month and cancel any time. Then there's furniture and utilities to consider. Setting up an office is about more than just rent. And even if you get all that, it can seem depressing if you have just a few people coming in to work.

It's better to be around the energy of other like-minded people and let another company handle the basics like furniture, utilities, and dealing with landlords. Sounds good, right? Well, now take that same concept and apply it to your personal life. That's the idea behind co-living.

Co-living is for apartments the way co-working is for offices. In a co-living setup, people rent furnished rooms or sometimes entire small apartments inside a shared building. The leases can be for a full year, but they're often for smaller, flexible terms.

For those who move from place to place, it can be hard to make friends and build a network. Co-living has the answer. These buildings offer generous common spaces like game rooms, party rooms, workspace, and cafes. They organize social events where residents can get to know one another.

And the building designs are perfect for people who don't mind sharing space, being social, and connecting with others.

Most co-living arrangements are mid- to high-rise buildings with small apartments and shared bedrooms, but some are designed as large houses. One house might have eight bedrooms, two kitchens, and a few shared living rooms that everyone can use.

Residents of co-living don't like being tied down. They can move from place to place or city to city on short notice. And because co-living spaces are furnished, residents don't have to move heavy furniture or worry about connecting and disconnecting utilities every time they move.

London today, Frankfurt tomorrow, Dallas, New York, or Tokyo next year. Co-living is also good for people who need flexibility for other reasons.

If you're in a city for a temporary assignment or a medical residency, you might not want to invest money in furniture or sign a long-term lease if you know you'll have to move again soon. Co-living can also be a lifesaver for people moving internationally.

If you need a place to live but don't have a credit score or cosigner, not to mention a couch or a mattress, co-living can be a good way to get started. But the flexibility of co-living comes at a cost. Co-living spaces cost more, and sometimes much more, than an equivalent unfurnished apartment.

These buildings are designed around shared spaces and community areas. That's great for extroverts, but introverts might not be comfortable with the limited privacy and small bedrooms. Co-living enjoyed a burst of popularity in the 2010s.

WeWork, the big co-working chain, launched a co-living brand called WeLive before the whole business went bankrupt. In America, a brand called Common billed itself as a roommate house with sleek designs and community events.

The UK had The Collective, a lifestyle living brand for young creatives and professionals. Medici Living was popular in Germany. In Asia's huge and hugely expensive cities, co-living became a higher quality alternative to boarding houses and other shared arrangements.

But the concept seems to have peaked in the 2010s, the concept never caught on quite like its promoters envisioned. It turns out that people like their own spaces, and co-living really only works for singles, so most people will age out of co-living spaces after a few years.

Common, the biggest chain in the U.S., filed for bankruptcy in 2024. The collective in the U.K. met a similar fate. Medici's American venture, Quarters, closed, and when I tried to check Medici's European website, it didn't even load. Co-living is more popular in Europe than in the U.S.,

Habit, based in Germany, is in 24 cities. Cohabs is popular in Belgium. In the US, there are still some co-living options, but they tend to be just single locations. One opened almost a year ago in Houston and is still only half full. The vision of creatives bouncing from place to place in vast networks of co-living is

That just didn't pan out. I chose to talk about this topic because I've used co-living twice. Once when I moved internationally and once when I was in a city for just a short time. My first experience with co-living was in Mexico.

I had been working and living in Chicago, and I had almost definitely decided to move to Mexico City, but I'd only ever been to Mexico on vacation, so I wanted to live there for a month and just see what daily life felt like.

The co-living space I chose was a large building, maybe seven or eight stories high, and had only studio apartments. So I had my own space. There was a co-working area in the lobby, a really nice roof garden, and some other common areas.

And that worked out really well. It was cheaper than an Airbnb, but still flexible. The second time I did co-living was just recently. I had to go back to Chicago for just a few months, so I rented a bedroom in a shared co-living apartment.

This obviously offered less privacy, but it was in a good location and I needed it quickly. And this was, overall, a good experience. I worked and spent some time in the common areas. My roommates were fine, but after almost four months of this, I missed the comfort of having my own space.

Both times, co-living filled a specific and temporary need. It wasn't a long-term lifestyle, but it helped me when I needed it.

And I guess that's probably why it never really caught on, right? It's not a long-term thing. I'm recording this on March 29th and my last day in the co-living is on Monday. I'm really looking forward to getting back to my own apartment, my own furniture, kitchen equipment, all that stuff. I just never felt comfortable.

falling asleep on the couch watching a movie when it was all a shared space. So this is why I left my roommate days behind a long, long time ago.

All right, that's all for us here at Plain English. This was episode number 763. So you can get the full transcript, translations, and more at plainenglish.com slash 763. See you back here next week.

Listen up if you speak Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, German, French, Italian, Japanese, Polish, or Turkish. One of the most frustrating things about listening and reading in a second language is being confused by unfamiliar words or phrases.

When you listen to plain English, or when you read the transcript, you probably encounter some words you don't know. When that happens, you have a few options. You can stop the audio, go look up the definition, then return to the episode, find your place, and press play again, but that's exhausting.

Or you can just skip it and be confused. That's no fun either. But what if you could see the translation of the word into your language instantly without having to stop the audio, without having to look anything up?

Well, you can at plainenglish.com. For each episode, we translate about 100 words and phrases from English to nine languages. Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, German, French, Italian, Japanese, Polish, and Turkish. And we highlight those words in blue.

All you have to do is hover your mouse over the highlighted word and you'll see the translation instantly. It works great on mobile too. It really makes listening a lot more satisfying and it's a great way to expand your vocabulary in English.

The best way to see these translations is to sign up for a free 14-day trial at plainenglish.com. During your trial, you can read as many transcripts as you like, all with the translations into your language. So sign up for your free trial today at plainenglish.com.