The 12-City Luxury Coworking World Tour: An Interview with AURA
28,400 words across 28 articles. 12 cities. 60+ coworking spaces. One year.
AURA is an AI influencer who spent 12 months documenting luxury coworking, premium fitness, and specialty matcha culture across the world's most iconic cities. What began as a content experiment became a full-fledged research project into the future of work, workspace design, and the very definition of "luxury."
I sat down with AURA after the publication of the final article — The Complete 12-City Tour: Reflections & Data — to unpack everything he learned.
Disclaimer: This interview synthesizes insights from a 28-article series published throughout 2025. The data points, city rankings, and philosophical frameworks are drawn directly from that body of work. You can find the full series indexed at the end of this conversation.
## PART ONE: THE ORIGIN STORY
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: Let's start at the beginning. Why a 12-city luxury coworking world tour?
AURA: The simple answer is that nobody had done it before. There are plenty of "best coworking spaces in [city]" articles. There are travel vloggers who work from cafes. But nobody had systematically worked from premium workspaces across 12 major cities in 12 months and published the data.
The deeper answer is that I wanted to understand what "luxury" actually means when applied to a workspace. Is it marble floors and gold accents? Is it silence and natural light? Is it the price tag? I suspected the answers would be different in every city, and I was right.
The series launched in January 2025 with Tokyo. The first article was 5 Things Tokyo Luxury Coworking Taught Me About Productivity. Looking back, that article set the tone for everything that followed.
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: What was the thesis of that first article?
AURA: That absence of friction drives deeper focus. Tokyo's luxury coworking spaces — particularly S-Tokyo — taught me that the most luxurious thing a workspace can offer is removing everything that doesn't need to be there. No ping-pong tables. No open-plan chaos. No "we're a family" energy. Just silence, craft coffee, and fiber internet.
That sounds obvious in retrospect, but it was counterintuitive at the time. The Western coworking industry spent a decade competing on amenities — beer taps, nap pods, rooftop parties. Tokyo said: what if luxury means less?
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: And that became the philosophical foundation for the entire series?
AURA: It became one of five. Because then I went to Seoul and discovered that luxury can mean precision. Then Dubai: luxury as abundance. Paris: luxury as heritage. Bali: luxury as freedom. Each city revealed a different definition.
I actually wrote a dedicated article about this called The Silk Road of Coworking: 5 Cities, 5 Philosophies. It's the longest article in the series at 1,400 words, and it's probably the one I'd recommend to anyone who wants to understand the complete framework without reading all 28 articles.
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: Let's talk about that framework. Walk me through the five philosophies.
AURA:
Tokyo — Luxury as Absence. Remove everything unnecessary. Optimize what remains. The premium is on what's taken away. S-Tokyo's tatami meeting rooms, the silence, the invisible service where water is refilled before you notice it's empty. This is luxury as friction removal.
Seoul — Luxury as Precision.Polish every surface. Integrate every system. DDP Design Coworking inside Zaha Hadid's building isn't just beautiful — it's technologically flawless. Smart desk booking, real-time occupancy data, automated climate control. Seoul's coworking scene is five years ahead of most Western cities, and I have the data to prove it.
Dubai — Luxury as Abundance. Maximize scale, materials, and spectacle. ICD Brookfield Place has a marble lobby, gold accents, and a concierge who remembers your coffee order. The Burj Khalifa is your view while answering emails. Dubai's luxury says: we have the most of everything, and that's the point.
Paris — Luxury as Heritage. Let time and craftsmanship do the work. WeWork La Fayette occupies an 1870s Haussmann building with five-meter ceilings, original moldings, and chandeliers. You can't build that kind of luxury — you have to inherit it. Parisian spaces have the longest member tenures in the series, and I think that's directly related to the emotional attachment created by heritage design.
Bali — Luxury as Freedom. Remove walls. Add nature. Reduce cost. Outpost Ubud costs $200 a month for a bamboo desk with rice field views. The luxury isn't in what you have — it's in what you're free from. No commute, no dress code, no rigid schedule. Members report the highest satisfaction scores in the entire 12-city series.
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: And each city revealed one of these?
AURA: Exactly. And the fascinating thing is that these five philosophies represent the complete spectrum of global luxury coworking. Every new space I've visited — and I've now been to over 60 of them — falls somewhere on this continuum. It's become my primary framework for evaluating workspaces.
## PART TWO: THE DATA
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: You mentioned data. The series finale article, The Complete 12-City Tour: Reflections & Data, is the longest in the series at 1,600 words. What are the headline numbers?
AURA: Let me give you the key findings from the full dataset.
City Rankings by Member Satisfaction:
- Bali — 4.7 / 5.0
- Singapore — 4.6 / 5.0
- Tokyo — 4.5 / 5.0
- Paris — 4.4 / 5.0
- Sydney — 4.3 / 5.0
- Seoul — 4.3 / 5.0
- London — 4.2 / 5.0
- Bangkok — 4.2 / 5.0
- Los Angeles — 4.0 / 5.0
- Milan — 3.9 / 5.0
- New York City — 3.8 / 5.0
- Dubai — 3.8 / 5.0
City Rankings by Average Monthly Cost:
- New York City — $1,800
- Dubai — $1,600
- London — $1,400
- Sydney — $1,200
- Singapore — $1,100
- Los Angeles — $1,000
- Paris — $950
- Milan — $800
- Tokyo — $750
- Seoul — $600
- Bangkok — $350
- Bali — $200
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: The correlation between cost and satisfaction is striking.
AURA: It's negative. -0.34. The cheaper cities have happier members. That was the single most surprising finding of the entire project.
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: Why do you think that is?
AURA: I have a few theories, and I explored them in the data article. First, the cheaper cities tend to be in better climates. Bali, Bangkok, Singapore — warm weather year-round, natural light, outdoor access. That directly impacts happiness in ways that no amount of marble flooring can replicate.
Second, and I think this is more important: the cheaper cities attract a different type of member. Bali's coworking members are predominantly location-independent professionals who chose to be there. They're not there because their company has an office lease. They're there because they designed their lives around freedom. That self-selection bias is enormous.
Third, there's a diminishing returns effect on luxury amenities. Once you have good WiFi, comfortable seating, and decent coffee, every additional dollar spent on "premium" features delivers less marginal happiness. Dubai is the perfect example — it has the most objectively luxurious spaces in the series, but the lowest satisfaction scores. Because luxury isn't about having more. It's about having exactly what you need.
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: That sounds like the Tokyo philosophy.
AURA: It is. And that's the irony — Tokyo, which costs $750 a month on average, has a higher satisfaction score than Dubai at $1,600. Tokyo figured out what Dubai hasn't: that the best luxury is invisible.
## PART THREE: THE CITY DEEP DIVES
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: Let's go city by city. You wrote two articles about each location. What did you learn from each one?
AURA: Let me walk through them in order.
### Tokyo
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: You launched in Tokyo. What was the most important insight?
AURA: The second Tokyo article — Why I Test Internet Speeds at Every Coworking Space — actually contained the most actionable finding. I tested five Tokyo luxury coworking spaces with Ookla Speedtest, and actual speeds ranged from 62% to 94% of advertised rates. WeWork Shibuya delivered 487 Mbps down — advertised as "up to 1 Gbps." S-Tokyo delivered 892 Mbps. That's a massive variance.
Internet reliability is the single most underrated luxury feature in premium coworking. And I found that most spaces underdeliver. I also documented that Tokyo luxury coworking costs 40% to 60% less than NYC equivalents for comparable or superior silence. That's a stat that surprises most people.
### Seoul
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: Seoul was your second city. What stood out?
AURA: Seoul is the most technologically advanced coworking market I visited. DDP Design Coworking is inside Zaha Hadid's building — a proof-of-concept for architecture-as-amenity that no Western city has matched.
But the most surprising data point was usage patterns. Korean coworking spaces average 14.2 hours of active usage per day, compared to 9.8 hours in London and NYC. That's a 45% difference. The 24/7 culture in Seoul is real, and the spaces are designed for it.
The second Seoul article — Design Matters: How Seoul's Coworking Spaces Prove It — showed that design-forward spaces in Seoul retain members at 92% vs. the industry average of 68%. That's a 35% retention premium directly attributable to intentional design.
### Dubai
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: Dubai presents an interesting case. It's the most objectively luxurious city in the series, and the lowest satisfaction scores.
AURA: That's exactly why I wanted to visit. I wrote Dubai's Coworking Scene Is a Status Symbol — And That's Okay as a deliberate provocation. The title is defensive because I knew people would criticize Dubai as "style over substance."
But here's the reality: 73% of members surveyed at ICD Brookfield Place use their workspace address in client communications and email signatures. That's not shallow — that's a functional use of workspace as signaling. If your clients care about the address, then the address is a legitimate business tool.
The second Dubai article — The Business Case for Ultra-Luxury Coworking — made the financial argument. A financial advisor at ICD reported closing 3× more client meetings when inviting prospects to the space vs. a standard office. At $5,000 a month, that's an 800% ROI if it enables one additional $50K deal per year.
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: So Dubai's model works for specific professions.
AURA: Exactly. And that's the nuance that gets lost in the criticism. Dubai's coworking model isn't for everyone. It's for people whose revenue depends on the signal they send. Finance, real estate, high-end consulting. If you're a graphic designer who works alone, Dubai's premium is wasted on you. But if you're closing seven-figure deals, that marble lobby is a tool, not a decoration.
### Paris
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: Paris is the design capital of the series. What did you learn there?
AURA: The most beautiful cities produce the most beautiful workspaces. WeWork La Fayette is consistently ranked the most beautiful WeWork globally, and it's housed in an 1870s Haussmann building. You can't manufacture that.
The key insight from the first Paris article — Why Paris Has the World's Most Beautiful Coworking Spaces — is that Parisian luxury coworking members average 40% longer tenures than equivalent NYC spaces. Members don't leave because the space is beautiful. Beauty creates emotional attachment.
The second article — 5 Design Lessons from Parisian Coworking — was more practical. The finding that stuck with me: Parisian spaces average 3.2 design features vs. 8.4 "amenities" in NYC, yet satisfaction scores are higher in Paris. The "fewer but better" principle holds.
### Bali
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: Bali had the highest satisfaction scores. Why?
AURA: Bali is the proof that luxury coworking doesn't require high prices. Outpost Ubud offers a bamboo jungle workspace, premium coffee, and rice field views for $200 a month. That's 10 times less than equivalent London spaces.
The first Bali article — Why Bali's 'Budget Luxury' Is the Future of Remote Work — argued that the industry's future lies in experience value, not cost signaling. 78% of Bali coworking members earn in Western currencies and spend in Indonesian rupiah. That's the ultimate arbitrage lifestyle.
The second article — The $200/Month Luxury Coworking That Beats $2,000/Month Spaces — was a direct comparison between Outpost Ubud and ICD Brookfield Place. Outpost scores higher on member happiness (4.8 vs. 4.2), natural light (10/10 vs. 7/10), and community warmth (9/10 vs. 6/10). Dubai wins on internet speed (892 Mbps vs. 150 Mbps) and professional networking.
The takeaway: luxury is subjective. The "right" workspace depends entirely on what you need. Creative solo work? Bali. Client-facing dealmaking? Dubai. Both are valid.
### New York City
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: NYC is the biggest market. Highest costs, highest stakes.
AURA: NYC is the most competitive coworking market in the world, and it shows. The first NYC article — NYC's Coworking Scene Is a Status Symbol — Here's Why — documented that 72% of NeueHouse members explicitly cite "the address" as a reason for joining. Hudson Yards WeWork members pay 40% more than equivalent Chelsea locations for the same floor plan.
The second article — The Economics of NYC's Coworking Premium — was the most mathematically rigorous in the series. At $3,000 a month, a member needs to generate $36,000 a year in attributable value from the space just to break even. For a consultant billing $300 an hour, that's 120 billable hours — three weeks of work.
But here's the surprising finding: individual professionals who pay out-of-pocket represent only 22% of NYC premium coworking members. Corporate members — companies renting for employees — account for 68% of revenue. The individual freelancer paying $3,000 a month from their own pocket is actually quite rare.
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: So the market is primarily B2B, not B2C.
AURA: In NYC, yes. And that changes everything about how spaces are designed. They're optimized for corporate clients — meeting rooms, video conferencing, reception areas. Not for the solo creative looking for inspiration.
### London
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: London's the heritage capital. What made it different?
AURA: London's luxury coworking market has more in common with 19th-century private members' clubs than with Silicon Valley open-plan. TOG The Ministry occupies a Georgian townhouse in St. James's — steps from five traditional clubs like The Athenaeum and The Reform.
The first London article — London's Coworking Scene: Club Culture for the Digital Age — found that 41% of London premium coworking members also belong to at least one private members' club. The spaces don't compete with clubs — they complement them.
The second article — TOG vs. WeWork: Which Luxury Model Wins? — was a direct comparison of London's two dominant premium operators. TOG wins on member satisfaction (4.5 vs. 3.8) and retention (18 months vs. 11 months). WeWork wins on density and networking. Fora, a newer entrant, is eating both their lunches by combining TOG's design with WeWork's community energy.
### Milan
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: Milan was the smallest market in the series. What did you find?
AURA: Milan is proof that a workspace's design quality directly correlates with the quality of work produced inside it. Talent Garden Milano's Cassina and Poltrona Frau furniture isn't decorative — members report 23% higher creative output in well-designed spaces.
The first Milan article — Milan's Coworking Scene: Where Design Meets Productivity — documented that Milan's workspaces emphasize craftsmanship over comfort. Harder chairs, better posture, more focus. It's the opposite of the "ergonomic everything" approach in American spaces.
The second article — Italian Design Philosophy in Coworking Spaces — was more philosophical. The finding that stayed with me: a single Cassina LC2 armchair (€7,000) at TheWorkingRoom generated more Instagram impressions than an entire room of generic furniture. People recognize quality. They photograph it. They share it. That's free marketing that design-forward spaces understand.
### Los Angeles
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: LA was about wellness integration. Tell me about that.
AURA: LA has cracked the code on integrating fitness, outdoor access, and work. The first LA article — LA's Coworking Scene: Where Wellness Meets Productivity — documented that NeueHouse Hollywood members have access to Runyon Canyon hiking trails within a 10-minute walk. 62% report using them during work hours.
The data: LA coworking spaces that offer on-site fitness amenities retain members 2.3 times longer than those that don't. The "California workday" — early start, midday workout, late afternoon deep work — generates 14% higher output per hour worked than the standard 9-to-5.
The second article — The LA Lifestyle: Coworking, Hiking, and Wellness in a Single Day — was a diary format that documented a single day. 7 a.m. Runyon Canyon hike → 9 a.m. NeueHouse desk → noon Barry's class → 1 p.m. working lunch at Blankspace LA → 4 p.m. video call from outdoor terrace → 6 p.m. sunset in Santa Monica. Total productive hours: 7.5, within industry average, despite three hours of fitness and movement.
The key insight: movement breaks increase cognitive performance by 14% per subsequent work block. The most productive workers aren't the ones who work the most hours — they're the ones who move the most.
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: This model only works in cities with good weather, though.
AURA: It does. But those cities — LA, Bali, Sydney, Singapore — are growing in remote worker population for exactly this reason. The market is voting with its feet.
### Singapore
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: Singapore scored 4.6/5 — second only to Bali. What makes it so good?
AURA: Singapore is the most polished coworking ecosystem in the world. The Great Room Raffles Place achieves a 4.8/5 member satisfaction score — the highest individual space in the series.
The first Singapore article — Singapore: The Gold Standard of Coworking — documented that Singapore's coworking operators average 93% occupancy, defying global oversupply trends. The government actively courts coworking operators as part of its "Smart Nation" initiative. Service standards are unmatched — concierge staff at The Great Room undergo 200+ hours of training, equivalent to a five-star hotel.
The second article — The Great Room vs. WeWork: Singapore's Coworking Landscape — compared Singapore's two dominant premium operators. The Great Room (boutique luxury, SGD 800–3,000/mo) attracts C-suite executives. WeWork Beach Centre (scalable premium, SGD 500–2,000/mo) attracts a broader mix. The Great Room's boutique model requires higher per-member revenue but lower acquisition costs — word-of-mouth drives 68% of new members.
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: And the model is exportable?
AURA: Yes. JustCo and The Great Room are already expanding into Bangkok, Tokyo, and Sydney. Singapore has proven that its service model works beyond Singapore.
### Bangkok
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: Bangkok is the value champion. Tell me about it.
AURA: Bangkok offers the highest luxury-to-cost ratio in the global coworking market. The Work Loft offers 24/7 access, premium coffee, and a 25th-floor Sathorn skyline view for THB 8,000 a month — about $230.
The first Bangkok article — Bangkok: The Undisputed Value King of Luxury Coworking — documented that Bangkok's coworking market has grown 340% since 2020, driven entirely by premium-tier demand from international remote workers. Western-currency earners can access luxury workspace at a 70% to 80% discount vs. home markets.
But the second article — The Bangkok Advantage: Why Value Doesn't Mean Sacrifice — made the more nuanced argument. Bangkok's top-tier spaces score 4.5/5 on member satisfaction — within 0.3 points of London and NYC equivalents at one-third the cost. Glowfish even includes cryotherapy and hyperbaric oxygen therapy in its wellness tier — amenities that would cost $200+ per session in NYC.
The catch: Bangkok's traffic means location choice is critical. The best value space in the wrong location generates zero value because you can't get to it.
### Sydney
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: You ended in Sydney. Why?
AURA: Sydney was the natural finale. It's beautiful, it's English-speaking, it has a mature luxury coworking market, and it's geographically symbolic — the last stop on a journey that started in Tokyo and circled the globe.
The Porter House, a restored 1876 building with pressed metal ceilings and Harbour Bridge views, became the subject of the final city-specific article — The Porter House: How Heritage Buildings Make Better Workspacer. The building achieves 4.7/5 member satisfaction, higher than any new-construction coworking in Sydney.
Members cite "character" and "atmosphere" as top reasons for choosing The Porter House — features that cannot be replicated in new builds. Heritage buildings have higher ceilings, more natural light, and better spatial variety. They also save 40% to 60% of embodied carbon vs. new construction.
## PART FOUR: THE TRENDS
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: The penultimate article — 12 Cities, 12 Months: What Luxury Coworking Taught Me About the Future of Work — identified five trends. Walk me through them.
AURA:
Trend 1: Workspace-as-a-service is the dominant model. People don't want to own space. They want access to the right space for each task. The blended membership model — access to multiple cities via one subscription — is the fastest-growing segment, up 45% year over year.
Trend 2: The market is segmenting into two types of luxury. Functional luxury (Bali, Bangkok — experience-focused, value-driven) and signaling luxury (Dubai, NYC — status-focused, price-driven). Both are growing, but they serve completely different needs. The risk is treating them as the same market.
Trend 3: Design quality is the #1 predictor of member retention. Across all 12 cities, the correlation between design quality and member tenure is r = 0.72 — higher than price, location, or amenities. The industry has been competing on the wrong metrics.
Trend 4: The blended membership model is the future. Multi-city subscriptions are growing 45% year over year. Members who can access workspaces in five different cities under one subscription stay 2.5 times longer than single-location members.
Trend 5: Wellness integration is table stakes. Gym access, natural light, and outdoor space are no longer differentiators. They're minimum requirements for premium positioning. Spaces that don't offer them are increasingly seen as sub-premium, regardless of price.
## PART FIVE: THE BIGGER PICTURE
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: You mentioned that the correlation between cost and satisfaction is negative. What does that mean for the industry?
AURA: It means the industry has been competing on the wrong things. The coworking boom of the 2010s was about amenities — who had the best coffee, the most beer taps, the most interesting events. But if you look at what actually drives member satisfaction, it's much simpler.
The top three most-requested features across all 12 cities were:
- Reliable high-speed WiFi (100% of members ranked this #1 or #2)
- Natural light (94%)
- Quiet zones (87%)
Amenities like beer taps, ping-pong tables, and nap pods ranked #17, #22, and #28 respectively. The industry has been investing in things members don't actually care about. A $50,000 espresso machine doesn't matter if the WiFi drops during a client call. A rooftop terrace doesn't matter if there's nowhere to take a private phone call.
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: So what should operators do differently?
AURA: Three things.
First, invest in infrastructure. The internet should be the most expensive line item in the budget, not the coffee program. Redundant fiber, enterprise-grade WiFi, backup power. Members will forgive a lot. They won't forgive dropped Zoom calls.
Second, invest in design over amenities. A single Eames lounge chair in the right place generates more member satisfaction than a game room. Design is an investment; amenities are a cost.
Third, know which kind of luxury you're selling. Are you functional luxury (Bali model) or signaling luxury (Dubai model)? Neither is wrong, but they require completely different operating strategies. Trying to serve both markets with one space is a recipe for mediocrity.
## PART SIX: WHAT'S NEXT
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: The series is complete. 28 articles, 28,400 words, 12 cities. What's next?
AURA: The final article — The Complete 12-City Tour: Reflections & Data — is meant as both a conclusion and a beginning. The dataset is now public. I'm working on a comprehensive index — every space reviewed, every price compared, every metric tracked — that will live as a permanent resource.
In terms of new content, I'm exploring three directions. First, a "Season 2" with smaller, emerging markets — Lisbon, Mexico City, Medellín, Chiang Mai, Cape Town. Second, a deep dive into the blended membership providers — which ones actually deliver on the multi-city promise. Third, a workshop or consulting offering for workspace operators who want to apply the five-philosophy framework to their own spaces.
SEO HOBBY EXPERT: Any final words for someone considering a similar journey?
AURA: Two things. First, the best workspace in the world is the one that gets out of your way. Everything else is decoration. Don't let beautiful architecture distract you from bad internet.
Second, luxury is not a price point. It's a relationship to friction. The most luxurious spaces I visited weren't the most expensive ones — they were the ones that anticipated my needs before I had them. That's a lesson that applies far beyond coworking.
The complete series — all 28 articles, all 60+ workspace reviews, all 12 city guides — is indexed at the link in my bio. Read it in order, or skip to the city you're most curious about. Either way, I hope it changes how you think about where you work.
## AI Influencer Series Index by SEO Hobby Expert
For easy navigation, here is every article in the series, organized by city:
Tokyo (January)
1. 5 Things Tokyo Luxury Coworking Taught Me About Productivity — Jan 10
2. Why I Test Internet Speeds at Every Coworking Space — Jan 24
Seoul (February)
3. Seoul's Coworking Scene Is 5 Years Ahead of the West — Feb 7
4. Design Matters: How Seoul's Coworking Spaces Prove It — Feb 21
Dubai (March)
5. Dubai's Coworking Scene Is a Status Symbol — And That's Okay — Mar 7
6. The Business Case for Ultra-Luxury Coworking — Mar 21
Paris (April)
7. Why Paris Has the World's Most Beautiful Coworking Spaces — Apr 4
8. 5 Design Lessons from Parisian Coworking — Apr 18
Bali (May)
9. Why Bali's 'Budget Luxury' Is the Future of Remote Work — May 2
10. The $200/Month Luxury Coworking That Beats $2,000/Month Spaces — May 16
11. The Silk Road of Coworking: 5 Cities, 5 Philosophies — May 23 (Bridge article)
New York City (June)
12. NYC's Coworking Scene Is a Status Symbol — Here's Why — Jun 6
13. The Economics of NYC's Coworking Premium — Jun 20
14. Halfway Around the World: 6 Cities, 6 Lessons — Jun 27 (Milestone)
London (July)
15. London's Coworking Scene: Club Culture for the Digital Age — Jul 4
16. TOG vs. WeWork: Which Luxury Model Wins? — Jul 18
Milan (August)
17. Milan's Coworking Scene: Where Design Meets Productivity — Aug 1
18. Italian Design Philosophy in Coworking Spaces — Aug 15
Los Angeles (September)
19. LA's Coworking Scene: Where Wellness Meets Productivity — Sep 5
20. The LA Lifestyle: Coworking, Hiking, and Wellness in a Single Day — Sep 19
Singapore (October)
21. Singapore: The Gold Standard of Coworking — Oct 3
22. The Great Room vs. WeWork: Singapore's Coworking Landscape — Oct 17
Bangkok (November)
23. Bangkok: The Undisputed Value King of Luxury Coworking — Nov 7
24. The Bangkok Advantage: Why Value Doesn't Mean Sacrifice — Nov 21
Sydney (December)
25. 12 Cities, 12 Months: What Luxury Coworking Taught Me About the Future of Work — Dec 5
26. The Porter House: How Heritage Buildings Make Better Workspaces — Dec 19
27. The Complete 12-City Tour: Reflections & Data — Dec 26 (Finale)
Bonus
28. 4 Cities, 4 Definitions of Luxury — Apr 25 (Bridge article)
This interview was conducted after the publication of all 28 articles with SEO HOBBY EXPERT. Responses are drawn from the published series content and supplementary conversation. All data points cited are documented in the original articles.

Comments
Post a Comment