About Pershore Coworking

Why this exists

In 2017, Ben visited a coworking space in Berlin. It was calm, well-designed, and full of people getting on with their work. After moving to Pershore in 2018, he thought the town could have something like this.

A few years later, Ben took a desk at a coworking space in the town. It worked well — until it closed.

That closure left a gap that, as far as he could tell, nobody was filling. Pershore — and Worcestershire more broadly — has a growing number of freelancers, remote workers, and small business owners. It has Georgian architecture, good independent businesses, a strong sense of community, and a town centre worth spending time in. What it didn't have was a proper place to work.

Pershore Coworking is the attempt to change that.

What we're trying to build

This isn't a corporate workspace or a serviced office. It's a space designed around the kind of working day that people here actually have — independent, self-directed, and better when there's a decent environment to do it in.

The goal is simple: a calm, professional space where people can work well, occasionally cross paths with others doing the same, and feel like they belong somewhere that isn't their kitchen table.

Community doesn't mean forced socialising or networking events. It means that over time, the people who use this space will know each other a little — and that Pershore will have a place that supports the way more and more of its residents work.

The space

Pershore Coworking opens on Broad Street in June 2026. We have hot desks, dedicated desks, a private office, a meeting room, a lounge, a kitchen, and a large garden with a gate onto St Andrews Garden.

It's designed to feel worth coming to — not just functional, but somewhere you'd actually choose over staying at home.

Get in touch

If you have questions, want to know more, or just want to say hello before we open, you're welcome to reach out.