What happens when you lose your workspace, your routine, and your community?
In this deeply human episode, Bernie and Lucy McInally crack open what real community feels like inside a Coworking space—and what gets lost when pricing, scale, or disconnection takes over.
Lucy shares how running grassroots freelancer meetups in London helped her understand the difference between surface-level connection and true belonging.
From trying to book overpriced rooms in Shoreditch to recreating the TownSq magic, her stories hit a nerve.
They discuss what independent Coworking operators still miss about freelancers, how the cost-of-living crisis is quietly pushing people out of shared spaces, and why hosting doesn’t scale in the same way as real estate does.
If you’ve ever felt the buzz of a “cool table,” wondered how to recreate that Pixie Dust in your space—or mourned the loss of it—you need this conversation.
Timeline Highlights
[00:05] Emily’s intro to Unreasonable Connection
[00:27] Bernie and Lucy catch up after a year of change
[01:08] Lucy introduces
and her journey[02:44] Inclusion vs. affordability: the tension in London Coworking
[05:50] Freelancers in crisis: rates, rent, and value misalignment
[09:16] Why Lucy started her freelancer meetups in Shoreditch
[12:24] Connection builds confidence: the power of being seen
[14:50] Cake, coffee, and a sense of belonging
[17:09] Anna from TownSq: When a community manager becomes your anchor
[22:59] Wigan: a community looking for a Coworking space
[24:16] Can community really be designed—or does it just emerge?
[26:55] Why Coworking feels more like a restaurant than a scalable asset
[30:10] Social battery drain and the cost of over-connection
[31:26]
: Substack as a storytelling platform[35:05] Tony from New Work Cities and the early Coworking spark
[36:40] Where to find Lucy online
Detailed Episode Breakdown
Inclusion isn’t just policy—it’s affordability, too
Lucy highlights the tension between talk and reality in London: numerous coworking spaces discuss inclusion, but their pricing excludes the very freelancers they claim to support.
Freelancer-led meetups aren’t events—they’re survival.
Lucy explains how a need for connection became a movement.
When she couldn’t afford local spaces, she brought people together in cafes and hotels, forming bonds that built confidence and community.
TownSq magic and the myth of scale
Together, Lucy and Bernie reflect on their time at TownSq: how it felt like family, and how that feeling disappears when people leave or spaces grow too big.
Some things don’t scale.
The Wigan model: community before real estate
Bernie shares the Weave Coworking story—where people started gathering before the building even opened.
A reminder that you don’t always need the space first.
Why hosting is sacred—and under-practised
Lucy touches on the rare gift of being truly welcomed.
It’s not in job descriptions. It’s in how people show up. And too many spaces get this wrong.
The Inclusive Coworker: making space for stories
Lucy’s Substack is about giving voice to those shaping coworking from the inside. It’s writing with weight—about belonging, access, and design that fits real life.
Links & Resources
Recurring Links
One More Thing
Coworking brings communities together, helping people find and share their voices.
Each episode of the Coworking Values Podcast explores Accessibility, Community, Openness, Collaboration, and Sustainability—values that shape the spaces where we gather, work, and grow.
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🔑 Community is the key
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