First look: WeWork Lightwell illuminates space for growing teams downtown (Photos)

February 8, 2020  |  Austin Barnes and Tommy Felts

WeWork Lightwell

Despite national headlines that question WeWork’s staying power, a second Kansas City location signals light at the end of the tunnel for the coworking giant. 

WeWork Lightwell

“The expectation of the workforce is changing,” Erik Wullschleger, WeWork community director, explained during a Startland News tour of the newly opened space, which occupies the third and fourth floors of Kansas City’s famed Lightwell building and offers room for larger, more mature teams. 

Click here to read more about the history of the Lightwell building and what’s to come when the project’s 21st-century redevelopment and reboot is unveiled later this year. 

“It’s a ’60s-style building that’s going to have a modern feel,” Wullschleger detailed as he stepped out of WeWork’s third floor and walked across a bridge that connects the space to a second building, soon to feature a restored lightwell and dramatic, multi-story waterfall-like staircase.

From two-person offices to private suites that hold teams of 15 and boast their own conference space, to a private wing with two stories and capacity to house more than 85 workers, there’s something for everyone at WeWork Lightwell, explained Wullschleger and Claire Inman, community manager. 

WeWork Lightwell

“People ask us all the time, ‘Who are you guys competing against?’ and you know, it’s natural to look at Plexpod or Industrious … there’s a ton of boutique, coworking firms here in Kansas City,” Wullschleger said, noting each space is at war with the same thing: traditional real estate and the allure of a home office.

“When you talk about amenities, those are what draw people off their couch or out of their home office,” said Wullschleger, noting the right balance of amenities and paying attention to the evolving needs of customers is where such a war is won.  

“The thing that doesn’t change is people want to be around other people. It doesn’t matter if you’re a single, sole proprietor or a team of 80, you want to be around others.”

Finding the perfect balance of community is at the center of WeWork Lightwell’s design, Wullschleger and Inman noted as they walked the nearly 100,000-square-foot space, offering insight into its aesthetic. 

Click here to schedule a tour of WeWork Lightwell. 

Claire Inman and Erik Wullschleger, WeWork

Claire Inman and Erik Wullschleger, WeWork

“It’s the same model and the same cultural ethos [as WeWork Corrigan Station], but with bigger common areas, bigger lounges and bigger conference rooms,” Wullschleger said, noting the space’s large kitchens, each dominated by a massive dining table — designed to invite collaboration — and stocked with everything from cold brew coffee to a variety of on-tap kombucha offerings. 

“Interestingly enough, alcohol is something that we’ve slowly kind of phased out — and not for the reasons you think,” he noted, offering a glimpse at how WeWork amenities have evolved since the opening of its Corrigan Station location in 2017. 

“People want this to be a serious work environment. If a customer walks in and they see beer taps, they kind of get nervous,” Wullschleger said. “I’d say [free flowing alcohol] maybe was a stigma of coworking spaces early on and it’s starting to shift a little bit to healthy things like kombucha.”

As the needs of the Kansas City coworking population change, WeWork’s metro locations hope to grow with them for years to come, he added. 

“A lot of the members that we’ve signed in this space already are larger businesses that have grown up in coworking, but they say [things like,] ‘I want to feel like an adult,’ in terms of the business. And that’s what this is going to be great for,” Wullschleger said of the impact WeWork Lightwell could have on area startups.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2020 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Ebrima “Abraham” Sisay, The Freedom Project

    KC filmmaker’s docu-series tackles mental health stigmas with assist from former Chiefs

    By Tommy Felts | March 3, 2022

    The brand of freedom sold to viewers of one of the nation’s most-watched cable news networks doesn’t reflect the kind Abraham Sisay has come to know, he declared, looking back on his journey from rising Gambian soccer star to Kansas City filmmaker and how it revealed the true definition of the word. “Fox News was…

    John Moore as Steve Jobs in "The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs" at The Austin Opera in February

    Steve Jobs opera opens in KC; How the Lyric Opera set the stage for tech icon’s musical arrival

    By Tommy Felts | March 3, 2022

    Editor’s note: The Lyric Opera of Kansas City is an advertiser with Startland News, though this report was produced independently by the nonprofit newsroom. A touring production that sings the virtues and vices of tech icon Steve Jobs not only arrives to the Kansas City stage this month — it was literally built here. “The…

    KC Can Compost

    Spring in the face of ‘doom and gloom’: KC Can Compost grows green infrastructure while expanding its own footprint 

    By Tommy Felts | March 2, 2022

    The market for commercial composting services goes well beyond restaurants hoping to dispose of food scraps — a welcome discovery for Kristan Chamberlain, who saw such specialized demand disintegrate in 2020 amid a pile of bad news for struggling eateries. Today, KC Can Compost has helped divert more than 1.4 million pounds of waste from…

    Kenyata Gant, Pink Lipps Cosmetics

    Pink Lipps hits Target, putting KC cosmetics line in 41 retail markets where Black shoppers bring green

    By Tommy Felts | March 2, 2022

    There’s no glossing over it, Kenyata Gant said. Black-owned businesses are thriving in the Midwest — and big box retailers are taking notice.  “I couldn’t believe it,” recalled Gant, owner of Pink Lipps Cosmetics, announcing the Kansas City-based cosmetics startup’s acceptance into 41 nationwide Target stores.  “I would always say how I would love to…