Some weeks, the kitchen table just doesn't cut it. If you find yourself in the studio three, four, five days out of five, a membership is the calmer — and cheaper — way to do it: one weekly rate, a desk whenever we're open, and none of the mental arithmetic of counting passes.
A membership is £54 a week, including VAT. That's the whole price. Book a desk any day we're open, Monday to Friday, eight in the morning to six at night, as often or as little as the week demands. There's no minimum, no peak pricing, and no higher tier you need to climb to before the good stuff unlocks.
everything, nothing held back
Everything that comes with a day pass comes with a membership. The big monitors and the sit-stand desks. The full kitchen, the bean-to-cup machine and the boiling tap. Fast fibre that doesn't wobble halfway through a video call. And the thing that's hardest to put a price on — a room full of people quietly getting on with their own work, which has a way of helping you get on with yours.
kept deliberately quiet
We keep the number of memberships deliberately low. The studio works because it's quiet and there's always a free desk, and we'd rather protect that than fill every chair. Capping members also keeps a little room spare for a day-pass booking when someone needs one — the freelancer down for the holidays, or the person whose spare room has quietly stopped working as an office. So memberships are limited; not as a sales line, but because that's how the room stays the room.
If you're in most weeks, a membership is almost certainly the cheaper option — and the figures further down show exactly where that line falls. If you're only in now and then, the day pass still makes more sense, and we'll happily keep selling you those.