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grebc 2 hours ago

Tenanted.

I know regardless of the vacancy I would not consider day rates, I’d eat the loss and deal with the cashflow via other means. Consider what sort of fit out would be necessary for what’s lets be honest is being suggested - hot desking - compared to a standard office: lots of IT systems necessary, lots of additional security, lots more cleaning, and likely lots more repairs for wear & tear which probably isn’t recoverable easily.

an hour ago | parent | next [-]
[deleted]
Schiendelman 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I'm not suggesting hotdesking at all; you may have seen someone else's comments suggesting they thought that! My best example (provided in my original comment) was Peerspace, but there are many others like that. Zero infrastructural investment past giving someone a key (or setting up an HID reader and such).

grebc an hour ago | parent [-]

What sort of property do you own and do you utilise this service?

I can’t fathom just putting some dinky reader on the front door and letting absolutely anyone in.

The current tenants of mine started a lithium battery fire, almost burnt my property down.

Schiendelman an hour ago | parent [-]

I own both commercial and residential property. I have used the company I mentioned, but I'm not trying to advertise for them, I just know other examples exist.

I didn't install a reader, I provided a physical key copy. Readers make it slicker.

I haven't had any problems, most of my rentals have been for small events. They brought their own supplies, minus a few tables I provided.

Generally people renting space have no incentive to create a problem. They pay, I get paid, they want to take some pictures or get some people together.