Faith and freelancers: why churches are turning into co-working spaces
Slick flexible working spaces are everwhere, but faith organizations offer a more basic service – with some unconventional benefits
Last summer, Ted Henken, a 47-year-old sociology professor at Baruch College, New York, was searching for somewhere to get some work done when he passed a sign advertising a co-working space. Although there is no shortage of these in Manhattan, this one was different: the sign was outside a 90-year-old Lutheran church. Henken was intrigued, but wary; if he joined, would someone try to convert him?
Curiosity, a sticker price of a $5 or $10 suggested donation and convenience won out. The unhip mess hall-esque kitchen of Our Savior’s Atonement (OSA) with its red concrete floor and farmhouse-style cabinets became Henken’s summer workspace.
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