Real Estate

City wants the magic of co-working spaces — but on its terms

Big banks and accountancy firms see benefits in joining the flexible-working craze

City wants the magic of co-working spaces — but on its terms
Photo: Illustration by Lily Panholzer

Laurie Ollivent, a practice development lawyer at Linklaters, spends most of her working week at the law firm’s London headquarters on Silk Street in the Square Mile. But for a day or so each week, her firm pays for her to work from a rented desk at nearby Moor Place, run by WeWork, a fast-growing provider of office space on short leases. Like WeWork’s other offices across the capital, the vibe is far from that of a corporate law firm. Beer flows. There are often dogs padding around.

Moor Place is the kind of flexible office space most commonly associated with start-ups and small, scrappy, entrepreneurial companies. But Ollivent has decided that lawyers need a change of scene too.

WSJ Logo
Pro Bono or Pro Nono? Law Firms Split on Fulfilling Deals With TrumpExternal link

Pro Bono or Pro Nono? Law Firms Split on Fulfilling Deals With Trump