Advertisements
Join us at the WorkX Conference
Advertise With Us
Monday, May 4, 2026
Explore
Allwork.Space
No Result
View All Result
Newsletters
  • Latest News
  • Leadership
  • Work-life
  • Coworking
  • Design
  • Career Growth
  • Tech
  • Workforce
  • CRE
  • Business
  • Podcast
  • MoreNew
    • Urban DictionaryNew
    • Expert Voices
    • Daily Brief NewsletterNew
    • Weekly Brief NewsletterNew
    • Product RoundupsNew
    • Advertise With Us
    • Partner Portal
Allwork.Space logo
No Result
View All Result
Newsletters
Allwork.Space
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Leadership
  • Work-life
  • Coworking
  • Design
  • Workforce
  • Tech
  • CRE
  • Business
  • Podcast
  • Career Growth
  • Newsletters
Advertisements
Your Partner in Virtual Office Growth - Alliance Virtual Offices
Home Coworking

Destination Coworking Is Changing How — And How Long — People Travel

In a Vermont ski town, access to real workspaces is turning long weekends into extended stays.

Greg CashbyGreg Cash
May 4, 2026
in Coworking
Reading Time: 2 mins read
A A
Destination Coworking Is Changing How — And How Long — People Travel

Remote workers are arriving earlier and staying longer, using coworking spaces to turn short trips into extended stays.

Most people come to Killington, Vermont, — a ski vacation hot spot — for a long weekend. They leave Sunday afternoon, maybe Monday morning if they can stretch it. For a long time, that was just how it worked.

That is changing, and the reason is simpler than you might think.

Advertisements
WorkX Conference August 10 - 12, 2026 San Francisco, CA

Thursday Morning at the Mountain

This past ski season we saw a pattern emerge at Slope Space that nobody planned for. A remote worker drives up from New York City or Albany on Wednesday night. Thursday morning, they are at a real desk, moving through a full slate of calls, clearing the week before the holiday weekend even starts. 

By Thursday evening, they are done, unpacked, and completely switched off. Friday through Sunday, they are on the mountain.

Advertisements
PrivacyPod

That same trip used to start on Friday night. Now it starts Thursday morning, and the weekend feels twice as long. The only thing that changed was having an actual place to work when they arrived.

Families Have Stopped Leaving Early

Families have figured out a version of this that works even better. One parent works remotely. The kids are in ski school all day. Instead of packing everything into four rushed days and driving home Sunday feeling like it was over too fast, they book the full week.

The remote parent works mornings from a dedicated desk with fiber internet, not taking calls in a busy lodge on subpar wifi. The kids ski every single day. Dinner happens together every night. There wasn’t a forced choice between getting work done and being present, and nobody had to leave before they were ready.

The People Who Just Decided to Stay

The most interesting members are the ones who stopped thinking of themselves as visitors at all. Passionate skiers, snowboarders, golfers, and mountain bikers who made a deliberate choice to spend serious time somewhere they genuinely love. 

Advertisements
WorkX Conference August 10 - 12, 2026 San Francisco, CA

Some own a condo. Some rent a ski house for weeks at a stretch. Having a real workspace nearby made it professionally and financially possible. They show up, get real work done, and spend the rest of their time exactly where they want to be.

What This Means for the Flexible Workspace Industry

The traditional coworking model is built around proximity to cities. Transit access, corporate offices, and urban density have always driven where spaces get built. Destination coworking flips that logic completely.

Killington draws just over one million visitors a year. A large percentage of them can work remotely. For most, the only thing sending them home early was the lack of somewhere worth staying to work. When the infrastructure is in place, the behavior shifts quickly.

This is not unique to ski towns. Coastal communities, national park gateways, lake towns, and anywhere people already want to spend real time are candidates for the same shift. The industry has spent years competing on density in urban markets. Destination coworking asks a completely different question.

Not “Where do you want to work?” but “Where do you want to be, and how do we make sure work does not get in the way of that?”

Advertisements
Subscribe to the Future of Work Newsletter
Tags: CoworkingExpert VoicesSpace-as-a-ServiceWork-llfe Balance
Share6Tweet4Share1
Greg Cash

Greg Cash

Greg Cash is the Founder of Slope Space, a coworking community at the base of Killington Mountain in Vermont, and the Director of Technology and Services at Simple Vacation Rentals. A former solutions architect and broadcast engineer with experience at NBCUniversal and Rohde and Schwarz, Greg built Slope Space so remote workers would never have to choose between a career and the mountain. 

Other Stories Recommended For You

Why Companies Must Stop Underusing AI To Start Capturing Real Productivity Gains
Tech

Why Companies Must Stop Underusing AI To Start Capturing Real Productivity Gains

byNirit Cohen
9 hours ago

The speed of AI transformation will depend on how fast organizations rethink the way work gets done.

Read more
The Token Career Conundrum Would You Take Less Salary For More AI Power

The Token Career Conundrum: Would You Take Less Salary For More AI Power?

2 days ago
3 Leadership Lessons I Learned From My Worst Bosses 2

3 Leadership Lessons I Learned From My Worst Bosses

3 days ago
CEO of Industrious Looks For Successor As His Leadership Role At CBRE Expands

CEO of Industrious Looks For Successor As His Leadership Role At CBRE Expands

4 days ago
Advertisements
Workspace Geek -Coworking and flex space management, made simple
Advertisements
Nexudus - Is Your Space Performing?

The Future of Work® Newsletter helps you understand how work is changing — without the noise.

Choose daily or weekly updates to stay current, and monthly editions to explore worklife, work environments, and leadership in depth.

Trusted by 22,000+ leaders and professionals.

2026 Allwork.Space News Corporation. Exploring the Future Of Work® since 2003. All Rights Reserved

Advertise  Submit Your Story   Newsletters   Privacy Policy   Terms Of Use   About Us   Contact   Submit a Press Release   Brand Pulse   Podcast   Events   

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Topics
    • Business
    • Leadership
    • Work-life
    • Workforce
    • Career Growth
    • Design
    • Tech
    • Coworking
    • Marketing
    • CRE
  • Podcast
  • Urban Dictionary
  • About Us
  • Advertise | Media Kit
  • Submit Your Story
Newsletters

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
-
00:00
00:00

Queue

Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00