EditorialAdam Neumann, a founder of WeWork, the office space company that imploded, is now working on a residential real estate start-up called Flow. Andreessen Horowitz recently funded the company. (Peter Prato/The New York Times)
EditorialVaynerMedia and WeWork: How Listening To Audiences Has Shaped WeWork?s Business For All the Ways We Now Work, The Marketplace Stage, Advertising Week Europe, Picturehouse Central, London, UK - 18 May 2022
EditorialDemand is high for office space on the three floors that WeWork leases in the Salesforce Tower in San Francisco. (Jim Wilson/The New York Times)
EditorialThe Watermark office building at the edge of Tempe Town Lake, home to WeWork, Robinhood and some Amazon employees, in Tempe, Ariz., on Feb. 7, 2022. (Adam Riding/The New York Times)
EditorialWeWork leases office space and then charges its customers — large companies, small businesses and individuals — to use it. (Hilary Swift/The New York Times)
EditorialAdam Neumann, co-founder of WeWork, during the DealBook Online Summit in Manhattan on Tuesday, Nov. 9, 2021. (Calla Kessler/The New York Times)
EditorialIt’s a victory that WeWork has made it this far. This week, a shrunken version of the start-up that rents office space is set to go public about two years after investors saw through WeWork’s hype, the company nearly ran out of cash, and its founder walked away with a fortune. (David Szakaly/The New York Times)
EditorialHanya Chang in the living room of her loft that she rents as a workspace through a start-up called Codi, in New York, July 12, 2021. (Sarah Blesener/The New York Times)
EditorialAn office building, Dock 72, where WeWork has six floors in the Brooklyn Navy Yard in New York, Oct. 23, 2019. (Karsten Moran/The New York Times)