Enjoy the college life experience? Homeroom invites you to KC’s new coliving concept
September 12, 2018 | Elyssa Bezner
Homeroom is a coliving experience that takes you back to your dorm room days, said Johnny Wolff.
“I think everyone looks back with really fond memories of living with really good friends in college in a house. The coliving experience is about taking that shared roommate situation and kind of curating it at Homeroom,” said the company’s founder.

Johnny Wolff
Homeroom homes come equipped with maid and lawn services, a community manager, and new furniture. Residents can also expect community events come October, Wolff said.
All homes in the Homeroom community are co-ed, usually made up of five to six roommates, depending on the house, he added.
To date, the four-month old company has acquired three homes across the greater KC area, said Wolff. Demand from homeowners who would prefer to lease their homes to a company, like Homeroom, as opposed to renting them out to individuals is growing, he added.
“We had to say ‘no’ to a couple homeowners since we can’t take on more than three at once until we hire additional team members,” he explained.
With a decade of real estate experience under his belt, Wolff went from signing leases with landlords and operating homes he lived in with roommates in San Francisco, to buying homes and renting out rooms in Austin, he said.
After spending a couple months doing market research on real estate appreciation over the next five to 10 years, he began Homeroom in Kansas City to balance his portfolio and look for better cash flow, Wolff added.

Homeroom is currently recruiting roommates by putting ads on Facebook and Craiglist, then combing through applicants with an extensive interview process, ending with credit and background checks, said Wolff.
Though Homeroom markets to millennials, all entrepreneurs and hustlers are welcome to apply, he added.
“We’re really targeting working professionals that we think would have a personality that fits, that seem like they’re personable and respectful, that would be good roommates,” he said.
The goal for Homeroom going forward, is to launch four houses per month, starting in September, said Wolff, as well as working on the website and exploring an app extension.
“We’re eventually going to evolve to something much bigger,” he said.
By the end of 2018, Homeroom hopes to operate 10, then 50 by 2019, to 1,000 homes across 12 Midwestern markets by 2020, added Wolff.
“As we grow, we’ll allow roommate members to easily transfer between locations throughout our network with 30 days notice,” he said.

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Coffee for the culture: Porter House KC founders partner with Messenger to craft Black-owned coffee brand
Black Drip Coffee brewed from within a desire to bring coffee culture to historically disenfranchised and underserved communities, said Charon Thompson and Daniel Smith. “It’s more than coffee,” noted Smith, who co-founded the brand, Black Drip Coffee, as well as the Porter House KC with Thompson. “We always talk about breaking down barriers and creating…
Founded to sell: Emerging KC tech firm led by startup veterans announces $725K funding round
A Kansas City startup’s initial funding round is expected to help small businesses close more deals, faster, said Scott Hansen. LeadSigma, a powerful and easy-to-use sales engagement platform, has raised a $725,000 family and friends round, Hansen, co-founder of LeadSigma, announced Friday. The round included prominent opinion leaders and agency owners in targeted SMB verticals,…
KCK couple fuels road adventures as camper van rentals speed up, interest in RV life surges
Adventurers Spencer and Sarah Martin dreamed of owning a camper van for several years, they shared, but expenses and full-time jobs came as roadblocks. “I’m a science educator, and she’s a school nurse,” noted Spencer Martin. “Camper vans are expensive and then sit unused for a majority of the year, so it had always been…
Spot of tee: How a KC teacher scored big when Ted Lasso sported a ‘Joearthur Gatestack’ shirt
The story behind a Kansas City-designed T-shirt celebrating local barbecue culture has more meat to it than any given ’que joint’s combo platter, Brendan Curran said. “We met playing basketball in the eighth grade,” Curran, founder of local apparel company, Three KC, said of his childhood friend, Jason Sudeikis, Overland Park-native, actor, comedian, and current…
